Analysis of admixed Greenlandic siblings shows that the mean genotypic values for metabolic phenotypes differ between Inuit and Europeans ...

Abstract Background Disease prevalence and mean phenotype values differ between many populations, including Inuit and Europeans. Whether these differences are partly explained by genetic differences or solely due to differences in environmental exposures is still unknown, because estimates of the ge...

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Main Authors: Lin, Long, Andersen, Mette K., Stæger, Frederik Filip, Li, Zilong, Hanghøj, Kristian, Linneberg, Allan, Grarup, Niels, Jørgensen, Marit Eika, Hansen, Torben, Moltke, Ida, Albrechtsen, Anders
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: figshare 2024
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.7248797.v1
https://springernature.figshare.com/collections/Analysis_of_admixed_Greenlandic_siblings_shows_that_the_mean_genotypic_values_for_metabolic_phenotypes_differ_between_Inuit_and_Europeans/7248797/1
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Summary:Abstract Background Disease prevalence and mean phenotype values differ between many populations, including Inuit and Europeans. Whether these differences are partly explained by genetic differences or solely due to differences in environmental exposures is still unknown, because estimates of the genetic contribution to these means, which we will here refer to as mean genotypic values, are easily confounded, and because studies across genetically diverse populations are lacking. Methods Leveraging the unique genetic properties of the small, admixed and historically isolated Greenlandic population, we estimated the differences in mean genotypic value between Inuit and European genetic ancestry using an admixed sibling design. Analyses were performed across 26 metabolic phenotypes, in 1474 admixed sibling pairs present in a cohort of 5996 Greenlanders. Results After FDR correction for multiple testing, we found significantly lower mean genotypic values in Inuit genetic ancestry compared to European genetic ...