Testing Genotype-Hormone Associations in Circumpolar Ancestral and Descendant Populations

This project produced novel findings regarding the association between genotype and human fertility, advanced new methods for studying hormonal and genotypic variation, and contributed the groundwork for subsequent research on the environmental, behavioral, and genetic determinants of reproductive h...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Virginia J. Vitzthum
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:43e5136e-c812-4bc7-9563-d5f7aa4a278e
id dataone:urn:uuid:43e5136e-c812-4bc7-9563-d5f7aa4a278e
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:urn:uuid:43e5136e-c812-4bc7-9563-d5f7aa4a278e 2024-06-03T18:46:37+00:00 Testing Genotype-Hormone Associations in Circumpolar Ancestral and Descendant Populations Virginia J. Vitzthum central Andes, central Asia, northern Europe ENVELOPE(121.3,-28.4,71.7,1.3) BEGINDATE: 1995-01-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2010-01-01T00:00:00Z 2017-02-17T00:00:00Z https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:43e5136e-c812-4bc7-9563-d5f7aa4a278e unknown Arctic Data Center Dataset 2017 dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC 2024-06-03T18:11:16Z This project produced novel findings regarding the association between genotype and human fertility, advanced new methods for studying hormonal and genotypic variation, and contributed the groundwork for subsequent research on the environmental, behavioral, and genetic determinants of reproductive hormone concentrations in arctic women. Individual differences in fertility are partly dependent upon a woman's reproductive hormone levels during her menstrual cycle. These hormone concentrations are also risk factors for several diseases (e.g., breast and other cancers, cardiovascular disease). Despite the significant roles of these hormones in women's health, very little is known about the extent and causes of variation in these hormones among pre-menopausal arctic women. This project examined whether genetic variation contributes to differences in fertility and hormonal variation in circumpolar ancestral (Central Asian) and descendant (indigenous South American) populations, and between former East and West German women. The specific characteristics of each of these population made them particularly suitable choices for this study. Contemporary Germany is very similar to the U.S. but had been divided for about 40 years into two separate countries with different lifestyles. Thus, Germany is both a good model for understanding hormonal variation in the U.S. population, and also allows a comparison of the effects of the different lifestyles on hormone concentrations in these genetically comparable German samples. Likewise, the Bolivian Aymara and Central Asian populations are genetically similar because of their shared ancestry with circumpolar populations, but their different lifestyles and environments are likely to influence hormone concentrations. We identified a significant SNP, exm562556 (rs34068461), associated with variation in fertility (fertility highest in GG genotype than in GT genotype which was higher than TT genotype). This variant is in a gene that encodes a protein thought to be involved in centrosomal or ciliary functions. Mutations in this gene also cause Leber congenital amaurosis type V, a syndrome including congenital blindness. The field, laboratory and analytical techniques advanced in this project are now being used in a study of the impact of arctic environmental conditions (most notably, the extreme seasonal variation in photoperiod) on Icelandic women's physiology and behaviors including reproductive and immune functioning, sleep repertoires, energy expenditure, dietary patterns, and psychosocial well-being. Dataset Arctic Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) Arctic Aymara ENVELOPE(-60.783,-60.783,-62.450,-62.450) ENVELOPE(121.3,-28.4,71.7,1.3)
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Data Center (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC
language unknown
description This project produced novel findings regarding the association between genotype and human fertility, advanced new methods for studying hormonal and genotypic variation, and contributed the groundwork for subsequent research on the environmental, behavioral, and genetic determinants of reproductive hormone concentrations in arctic women. Individual differences in fertility are partly dependent upon a woman's reproductive hormone levels during her menstrual cycle. These hormone concentrations are also risk factors for several diseases (e.g., breast and other cancers, cardiovascular disease). Despite the significant roles of these hormones in women's health, very little is known about the extent and causes of variation in these hormones among pre-menopausal arctic women. This project examined whether genetic variation contributes to differences in fertility and hormonal variation in circumpolar ancestral (Central Asian) and descendant (indigenous South American) populations, and between former East and West German women. The specific characteristics of each of these population made them particularly suitable choices for this study. Contemporary Germany is very similar to the U.S. but had been divided for about 40 years into two separate countries with different lifestyles. Thus, Germany is both a good model for understanding hormonal variation in the U.S. population, and also allows a comparison of the effects of the different lifestyles on hormone concentrations in these genetically comparable German samples. Likewise, the Bolivian Aymara and Central Asian populations are genetically similar because of their shared ancestry with circumpolar populations, but their different lifestyles and environments are likely to influence hormone concentrations. We identified a significant SNP, exm562556 (rs34068461), associated with variation in fertility (fertility highest in GG genotype than in GT genotype which was higher than TT genotype). This variant is in a gene that encodes a protein thought to be involved in centrosomal or ciliary functions. Mutations in this gene also cause Leber congenital amaurosis type V, a syndrome including congenital blindness. The field, laboratory and analytical techniques advanced in this project are now being used in a study of the impact of arctic environmental conditions (most notably, the extreme seasonal variation in photoperiod) on Icelandic women's physiology and behaviors including reproductive and immune functioning, sleep repertoires, energy expenditure, dietary patterns, and psychosocial well-being.
format Dataset
author Virginia J. Vitzthum
spellingShingle Virginia J. Vitzthum
Testing Genotype-Hormone Associations in Circumpolar Ancestral and Descendant Populations
author_facet Virginia J. Vitzthum
author_sort Virginia J. Vitzthum
title Testing Genotype-Hormone Associations in Circumpolar Ancestral and Descendant Populations
title_short Testing Genotype-Hormone Associations in Circumpolar Ancestral and Descendant Populations
title_full Testing Genotype-Hormone Associations in Circumpolar Ancestral and Descendant Populations
title_fullStr Testing Genotype-Hormone Associations in Circumpolar Ancestral and Descendant Populations
title_full_unstemmed Testing Genotype-Hormone Associations in Circumpolar Ancestral and Descendant Populations
title_sort testing genotype-hormone associations in circumpolar ancestral and descendant populations
publisher Arctic Data Center
publishDate 2017
url https://search.dataone.org/view/urn:uuid:43e5136e-c812-4bc7-9563-d5f7aa4a278e
op_coverage central Andes, central Asia, northern Europe
ENVELOPE(121.3,-28.4,71.7,1.3)
BEGINDATE: 1995-01-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2010-01-01T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-60.783,-60.783,-62.450,-62.450)
ENVELOPE(121.3,-28.4,71.7,1.3)
geographic Arctic
Aymara
geographic_facet Arctic
Aymara
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
_version_ 1800868756291846144