Abstract

Specificity of the structure of gene pools of different ethno-territorial groups of the human population can underlie the epidemiological features of the spread of tuberculosis (TB) and the structure of the genetic component of the susceptibility to the disease. The variability of 62 genetic variants potentially associated with the risk of the development of TB in the Russian population of the city of Tomsk has been studied and the differentiation of various ethno-territorial groups of the world by these markers has been assessed. The studied sample comprised 445 Russian residents of the city of Tomsk without bronchopulmonary pathology. For comparison, the data on the variability of the genetic markers of interest in 26 populations from the 1000 Genomes Project was involved. In the Tomsk population, only the ancestral allele was found for seven of the 58 SNPs studied; the allele frequencies for 36 markers were within the limits of the values seen in other European populations; for 12 SNPs, the observed frequencies were closer to populations with a significant Mongoloid component. By the total of the SNPs, the Tomsk population, despite the geographical distance from the rest of the European populations, did not differ from them (in genetic distances and Gst statistics), although it had some features of the gene pool. Intergroup differentiation of the world populations by these SNPs reflects mainly interracial differences. The greatest differences in the genetic structure between the studied populations were seen for the markers localized in intergenic regions. Statistically significant differences were found when comparing the levels of the average expected heterozygosity between groups of “L4 carrier populations” of mycobacteria and “non-L4” populations, which indicates the impact of the prevalence of different pathogenic lineages of M. tuberculosis on the formation of population specificity of the allelic frequencies.

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