Characterization of Ancestral Origin of Cystic Fibrosis of Patients with New Reported Mutations in CFTR

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Abstract

The incidence of cystic fibrosis (CF) and the frequency of the variants reported for CFTR depend on the population; furthermore, CF symptomatology is characterized by obstructive lung disease and pancreatic insufficiency among other symptoms, which are reliant on the individual's genotype. The Ecuadorian population is a mixture of Native Americans, Europeans, and Africans. That population admixture could be the reason for the new mutations reported in a previous study by Ruiz et al. (2019). A panel of 46 Ancestry Informative Markers was used to estimate the ancestral proportions of each available sample (12 samples in total). As a result, the Native American ancestry proportion was the most prevalent in almost all individuals, except for three patients from Guayaquil with the mutation [c.757G>A:p.Gly253Arg; c.1352G>T:p.Gly451Val] who had the highest European composition.

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Paz-Y-Miño, C., Zambrano, A. K., Ruiz-Cabezas, J. C., Armendáriz-Castillo, I., García-Cárdenas, J. M., Guerrero, S., … Leone, P. E. (2020). Characterization of Ancestral Origin of Cystic Fibrosis of Patients with New Reported Mutations in CFTR. BioMed Research International, 2020. https://doi.org/10.1155/2020/9074760

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