Author:
Wilson Robin Taylor,Roff Alanna N.,Dai P. Jenny,Fortugno Tracey,Douds Jonathan,Chen Gang,Grove Gary L.,Nikiforova Sheila Ongeri,Barnholtz-Sloan Jill,Frudakis Tony,Chinchilli Vernon M.,Hartman Terryl J.,Demers Laurence M.,Shriver Mark D.,Canfield Victor A.,Cheng Keith C.
Abstract
AbstractLower serum vitamin D (25(OH)D) among individuals with African ancestry is primarily attributed to skin pigmentation. However, the influence of genetic polymorphisms controlling for skin melanin content has not been investigated. Therefore, we investigated differences in non-summer serum vitamin D metabolites according to self-reported race, genetic ancestry, skin reflectance and key pigmentation genes (Healthy individuals reporting at least half African American or half European American heritage were frequency matched to one another on age (±2 years) and sex. One hundred and seventy-six autosomal ancestry informative markers were used to estimate genetic ancestry. Melanin index was measured by reflectance spectrometry. Serum vitamin D metabolites [25(OH)DFifty African Americans and 50 European Americans participated in the study. Compared withThe
Subject
Endocrinology,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Cited by
7 articles.
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