Abstract

Genetic patterns of inter-population variation are a result of different demographic and adaptive histories, which gradually shape the frequency distribution of the variants. However, the study of clinically relevant mutations has a Eurocentric bias. The Romani, the largest transnational minority ethnic group in Europe, originated in South Asia and received extensive gene flow from West Eurasia. Most medical genetic studies have only explored founder mutations related to Mendelian disorders in this population. Here we analyze exome sequences and genome-wide array data of 89 healthy Spanish Roma individuals to study complex traits and disease. We apply a different framework and focus on variants with both increased and decreased allele frequencies, taking into account their local ancestry. We report several OMIM traits enriched for genes with deleterious variants showing increased frequencies in Roma or in non-Roma (e.g., obesity is enriched in Roma, with an associated variant linked to South Asian ancestry; while non-insulin dependent diabetes is enriched in non-Roma Europeans). In addition, previously reported pathogenic variants also show differences among populations, where some variants segregating at low frequency in non-Roma are virtually absent in the Roma. Lastly, we describe frequency changes in drug-response variation, where many of the variants increased in Roma are clinically associated with metabolic and cardiovascular-related drugs. These results suggest that clinically relevant variation in Roma cannot only be characterized in terms of founder mutations. Instead, we observe frequency differences compared to non-Roma: some variants are absent, while other have drifted to higher frequencies. As a result of the admixture events, these clinically damaging variants can be traced back to both European and South Asian-related ancestries. This can be attributed to a different prevalence of some genetic disorders or to the fact that genetic susceptibility variants are mostly studied in populations of European descent, and can differ in individuals with different ancestries.

Highlights

  • Human genetic diversity is a continuum, which means that there are no fixed, immutable or discrete boundaries between populations

  • In order to assess the genetic portability from non-Roma to Roma, we examined the allele sharing and linkage disequilibrium patterns between populations

  • We have previously shown that Roma exhibit a considerable amount of private variants; their proportion is lower than in other populations: 15,287 population-specific variants in Roma; 25,060 in IBS; 24,158 in Toscani in Italia (TSI); 21,160 in Punjabi from Lahore (PJL); 22,040 in Gujarati Indian from Houston (GIH); and 24,070 in Indian Telugu from the United Kingdom (ITU) (Font-Porterias et al, 2021)

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Summary

Introduction

Human genetic diversity is a continuum, which means that there are no fixed, immutable or discrete boundaries between populations. Genomic variation across populations is observed for treatment response differences, especially in genes related to absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME) of drugs (Dopazo et al, 2016; Škaric-Juricet al., 2018; Sirugo et al, 2019). The metabolism of the anticoagulant warfarin can differ due to several genetic polymorphisms; their frequencies are different in European and African descent groups, which challenges the correct dosage prescription (Bress et al, 2012; Johnson et al, 2017; Sirugo et al, 2019)

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