학술논문

The genetic diversity of multiple sclerosis risk among Hispanic and African American populations living in the United States.
Document Type
article
Source
Multiple sclerosis (Houndmills, Basingstoke, England). 26(11)
Subject
Humans
Multiple Sclerosis
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
Alleles
United States
Genetic Variation
Hispanic or Latino
Black or African American
Multiple sclerosis
admixture
allelic heterogeneity
genetics
locus heterogeneity
multi-ethnic
pathway analysis
risk score
Genetics
Neurodegenerative
Human Genome
Brain Disorders
Clinical Research
Autoimmune Disease
Genetic Testing
Neurosciences
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Clinical Sciences
Neurology & Neurosurgery
Language
Abstract
BackgroundSubstantial progress has been made toward unraveling the genetic architecture of multiple sclerosis (MS) within populations of European ancestry, but few genetic studies have focused on Hispanic and African American populations within the United States.ObjectiveWe sought to test the relevance of common European MS risk variants outside of the major histocompatibility complex (n = 200) within these populations.MethodsGenotype data were available on 2652 Hispanics (1298 with MS, 1354 controls) and 2435 African Americans (1298 with MS, 1137 controls). We conducted single variant, pathway, and cumulative genetic risk score analyses.ResultsWe found less replication than statistical power suggested, particularly among African Americans. This could be due to limited correlation between the tested and causal variants within the sample or alternatively could indicate allelic and locus heterogeneity. Differences were observed between pathways enriched among the replicating versus all 200 variants. Although these differences should be examined in larger samples, a potential role exists for gene-environment or gene-gene interactions which alter phenotype differentially across racial and ethnic groups. Cumulative genetic risk scores were associated with MS within each study sample but showed limited diagnostic capability.ConclusionThese findings provide a framework for fine-mapping efforts in multi-ethnic populations of MS.