Scientific Reports (Jul 2021)

The first insight into the genetic structure of the population of modern Serbia

  • Tamara Drljaca,
  • Branka Zukic,
  • Vladimir Kovacevic,
  • Branislava Gemovic,
  • Kristel Klaassen-Ljubicic,
  • Vladimir Perovic,
  • Mladen Lazarevic,
  • Sonja Pavlovic,
  • Nevena Veljkovic

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-93129-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract The complete understanding of the genomic contribution to complex traits, diseases, and response to treatments, as well as genomic medicine application to the well-being of all humans will be achieved through the global variome that encompasses fine-scale genetic diversity. Despite significant efforts in recent years, uneven representation still characterizes genomic resources and among the underrepresented European populations are the Western Balkans including the Serbian population. Our research addresses this gap and presents the first ever targeted sequencing dataset of variants in clinically relevant genes. By measuring population differentiation and applying the Principal Component and Admixture analysis we demonstrated that the Serbian population differs little from other European populations, yet we identified several novel and more frequent variants that appear as its unique genetic determinants. We explored thoroughly the functional impact of frequent variants and its correlation with the health burden of the population of Serbia based on a sample of 144 individuals. Our variants catalogue improves the understanding of genetics of modern Serbia, contributes to research on ancestry, and aids in improvements of well-being and health equity. In addition, this resource may also be applicable in neighboring regions and valuable in worldwide functional analyses of genetic variants in individuals of European descent.