PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Admixture mapping in two Mexican samples identifies significant associations of locus ancestry with triglyceride levels in the BUD13/ZNF259/APOA5 region and fine mapping points to rs964184 as the main driver of the association signal.

  • Esteban J Parra,
  • Andrew Mazurek,
  • Christopher R Gignoux,
  • Alexandra Sockell,
  • Michael Agostino,
  • Andrew P Morris,
  • Lauren E Petty,
  • Craig L Hanis,
  • Nancy J Cox,
  • Adan Valladares-Salgado,
  • Jennifer E Below,
  • Miguel Cruz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0172880
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. e0172880

Abstract

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We carried out an admixture mapping study of lipid traits in two samples from Mexico City. Native American locus ancestry was significantly associated with triglyceride levels in a broad region of chromosome 11 overlapping the BUD13, ZNF259 and APOA5 genes. In our fine-mapping analysis of this region using dense genome-wide data, rs964184 is the only marker included in the 99% credible set of SNPs, providing strong support for rs964184 as the causal variant within this region. The frequency of the allele associated with increased triglyceride concentrations (rs964184-G) is between 30-40% higher in Native American populations from Mexico than in European populations. The evidence currently available for this variant indicates that it may be exerting its effect through three potential mechanisms: 1) modification of enhancer activity, 2) regulation of the expression of several genes in cis and/or trans, or 3) modification of the methylation patterns of the promoter of the APOA5 gene.