Author:
Azulay Rossana Santiago de Sousa,Porto Luís Cristóvão,Silva Dayse Aparecida,Tavares Maria da Glória,Reis Roberta Maria Duailibe Ferreira,Nascimento Gilvan Cortês,Damianse Sabrina da Silva Pereira,Rocha Viviane Chaves de Carvalho,Magalhães Marcelo,Rodrigues Vandilson,Carvalho Paulo Ricardo Vilas Boas,Faria Manuel dos Santos,Gomes Marília Brito
Abstract
AbstractThis study aimed to investigate the relationship between genetic ancestry inferred from autosomal and Y chromosome markers and HLA genotypes in patients with Type 1 Diabetes from an admixed Brazilian population. Inference of autosomal ancestry; HLA-DRB1, -DQA1 and -DQB1 typifications; and Y chromosome analysis were performed. European autosomal ancestry was about 50%, followed by approximately 25% of African and Native American. The European Y chromosome was predominant. The HLA-DRB1*03 and DRB1*04 alleles presented risk association with T1D. When the Y chromosome was European, DRB1*03 and DRB1*04 homozygote and DRB1*03/DRB1*04 heterozygote genotypes were the most frequent. The results suggest that individuals from Maranhão have a European origin as their major component; and are patrilineal with greater frequency from the R1b haplogroup. The predominance of the HLA-DRB1*03 and DRB1*04 alleles conferring greater risk in our population and being more frequently related to the ancestry of the European Y chromosome suggests that in our population, the risk of T1D can be transmitted by European ancestors of our process miscegenation. However, the Y sample sizes of Africans and Native Americans were small, and further research should be conducted with large mixed sample sizes to clarify this possible association.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
7 articles.
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