Genetic heterogeneity of self-reported ancestry groups in an admixed Brazilian population

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Abstract

Background: Population stratification is the main source of spurious results and poor reproducibility in genetic association findings. Population heterogeneity can be controlled for by grouping individuals in ethnic clusters; however, in admixed populations, there is evidence that such proxies do not provide efficient stratification control. The aim of this study was to evaluate the relation of self-reported with genetic ancestry and the statistical risk of grouping an admixed sample based on self-reported ancestry. Methods: A questionnaire that included an item on self-reported ancestry was completed by 189 female volunteers from an admixed Brazilian population. Individual genetic ancestry was then determined by genotyping ancestry informative markers. Results: Self-reported ancestry was classified as white, intermediate, and black. The mean difference among selfreported groups was significant for European and African, but not Amerindian, genetic ancestry. Pairwise fixation index analysis revealed a significant difference among groups. However, the increase in the chance of type 1 error was estimated to be 14%. Conclusions: Self-reporting of ancestry was not an appropriate methodology to cluster groups in a Brazilian population, due to high variance at the individual level. Ancestry informative markers are more useful for quantitative measurement of biological ancestry. © 2011 by the Japan Epidemiological Association.

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APA

Lins, T. C., Vieira, R. G., Abreu, B. S., Gentil, P., Moreno-Lima, R., Oliveira, R. J., & Pereira, R. W. (2011). Genetic heterogeneity of self-reported ancestry groups in an admixed Brazilian population. Journal of Epidemiology, 21(4), 240–245. https://doi.org/10.2188/jea.JE20100164

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