Abstract

Background: Inference of genetic ancestry is of great interest in many fields and one of the markers in these analyses is ancestry informative marker single nucleotide polymorphisms (AIMSNPs). The Malay population is an ethnic group located mainly in South East Asia and comprises the largest ethnicity in Malaysia.
 Objectives: To determine Malay ancestry, Yahya et al, 2017 selected 37,487 SNPs from the genotyping data collected by the Malaysian Node of the Human Variome Project and Singapore Genome Variation Project and referenced them against the data from the International HapMap Project Phase 3. The SNPs determined to be informative for ancestry were compiled into AIM-SNP panels, and from these a few SNPs were selected for optimization in preparation for single base extension reaction multiplexing.
 Methodology: The chosen AIMSNPs were optimized and validated on Malay and non-Malay populations. Genotyping was carried out on participants of self-reported Malay and non-Malay ancestry respectively and the data were compared for Malay and non-Malay population to investigate for significant differences in the genotype between Malay and non-Malay participants.
 Findings: The results showed great similarities between the Malay and non-Malay population, which may arise from many factors, and further optimization of more SNPs and genotyping is required to definitively conclude the validity of the AIM-SNP panels for Malay population
 Conclusion: Knowledge of ancestry is important to minimise spurious association. This pilot study gives a brief account of the optimization process and offers an insight into how this may be done in South East Asian populations.

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