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GWAS Study

Genetic architecture in Greenland is shaped by demography, structure and selection.

Stæger FF, Andersen MK, Li Z et al.

39939757 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
3707 Participants
48 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

SF
Stæger FF
AM
Andersen MK
LZ
Li Z
HJ
Hjerresen JP
HS
He S
SC
Santander CG
JR
Jensen RT
RK
Rex KF
TA
Thuesen ACB
HK
Hanghøj K
SI
Seiding IH
JE
Jørsboe E
SS
Stinson SE
RM
Rasmussen MS
BR
Balboa RF
LC
Larsen CVL
BP
Bjerregaard P
SM
Schubert M
MJ
Meisner J
LA
Linneberg A
GN
Grarup N
ZE
Zeggini E
NR
Nielsen R
JM
Jørgensen ME
HT
Hansen T
MI
Moltke I
AA
Albrechtsen A
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Greenlandic Inuit and other indigenous populations are underrepresented in genetic research1,2, leading to inequity in healthcare opportunities. To address this, we performed analyses of sequenced or imputed genomes of 5,996 Greenlanders with extensive phenotypes. We quantified their historical population bottleneck and how it has shaped their genetic architecture to have fewer, but more common, variable sites. Consequently, we find twice as many high-impact genome-wide associations to metabolic traits in Greenland compared with Europe. We infer that the high-impact variants arose after the population split from Native Americans and thus are Arctic-specific, and show that some of them are common due to not only genetic drift but also selection. We also find that European-derived polygenic scores for metabolic traits are only half as accurate in Greenlanders as in Europeans, and that adding Arctic-specific variants improves the overall accuracy to the same level as in Europeans. Similarly, lack of representation in public genetic databases makes genetic clinical screening harder in Greenlandic Inuit, but inclusion of Greenlandic data remedies this by reducing the number of non-causal candidate variants by sixfold. Finally, we identify pronounced genetic fine structure that explains differences in prevalence of monogenic diseases in Greenland and, together with recent changes in mobility, leads to a predicted future reduction in risk for certain recessive diseases. These results illustrate how including data from Greenlanders can greatly reduce inequity in genomic-based healthcare.

3,707 Greenlandic Inuit ancestry individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

3707
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
Other admixed ancestry
Ancestry
Denmark, Greenland
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

AI-Generated Summary

AI-generated by DNAGENICS

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