2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2015.12.001
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Genetic Diversity and Association Studies in US Hispanic/Latino Populations: Applications in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos

Abstract: US Hispanic/Latino individuals are diverse in genetic ancestry, culture, and environmental exposures. Here, we characterized and controlled for this diversity in genome-wide association studies (GWASs) for the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (HCHS/SOL). We simultaneously estimated population-structure principal components (PCs) robust to familial relatedness and pairwise kinship coefficients (KCs) robust to population structure, admixture, and Hardy-Weinberg departures. The PCs revealed substa… Show more

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Cited by 284 publications
(407 citation statements)
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References 71 publications
(95 reference statements)
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“…Participants were genotyped on the HCHS Custom 15041502 array (Illumina Omni2.5M + custom content). Quality control was conducted as described (Laurie et al 2010;Conomos et al 2016). In brief, samples were checked for annotated versus genetic sex discrepancies, gross chromosomal anomalies, missing call rates, contaminations, and batch effects.…”
Section: Genotyping Quality Control and Imputationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Participants were genotyped on the HCHS Custom 15041502 array (Illumina Omni2.5M + custom content). Quality control was conducted as described (Laurie et al 2010;Conomos et al 2016). In brief, samples were checked for annotated versus genetic sex discrepancies, gross chromosomal anomalies, missing call rates, contaminations, and batch effects.…”
Section: Genotyping Quality Control and Imputationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Population structure studies have largely focused on populations of European descent, and ancestry differences among European populations have been well studied and characterized (Novembre et al 2008;Nelis et al 2009). Recent studies have also investigated the genetic structure of more diverse populations, including recently admixed populations, such as African-Americans (Zakharia et al 2009;Bryc et al 2010a) and Hispanics (Manichaikul et al 2012;Conomos et al 2016), who have experienced admixing within the past few hundred years from two or more ancestral populations from different continents.Both continental and fine-scale genetic structures of human populations have largely been characterized by aggregating measures of ancestry across the autosomal chromosomes. While it may be reasonable to assume that population structure patterns across the genome are similar for populations with ancestry derived from a single continent, such as populations of European descent, this may not be a reasonable assumption for admixed populations who have recent ancestry from multiple continents.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Population structure studies have largely focused on populations of European descent, and ancestry differences among European populations have been well studied and characterized (Novembre et al 2008;Nelis et al 2009). Recent studies have also investigated the genetic structure of more diverse populations, including recently admixed populations, such as African-Americans (Zakharia et al 2009;Bryc et al 2010a) and Hispanics (Manichaikul et al 2012;Conomos et al 2016), who have experienced admixing within the past few hundred years from two or more ancestral populations from different continents.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Studies highlighting heterogeneity in breast cancer risk between Hispanic women underscore the importance of differences in country of origin, duration of residence in the United States, and acculturation in estimating the risk of breast cancer (10,(21)(22)(23). Further, there is evidence of genomic differences between Hispanic subgroups in the Unites States (24,25). These factors were not captured in the HRM and may contribute to some of the differences in HRM relative risks and absolute risk predictions in the validation studies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 98%