Ethnic divergence and linkage disequilibrium of novel SNPs in the human NLI-IF gene: evidence of human origin and lack of association with tuberculosis susceptibility |
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Authors: | X. Ma J. Wright S. Dou P. Olsen L. Teeter G. Adams E. Graviss |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Pathology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA, US;(2) Department of Pathology, Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza (209E), Houston, TX 77030, USA Tel. +1-713-798-8097; Fax +1-713-798-8895 e-mail: egraviss@bcm.tmc.edu, US |
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Abstract: | Sequence variation in the human genome has been used as a tool in studying human diseases and the evolutionary history of man. A human inherited predisposition to tuberculosis has been suggested and studied; however, genetic mechanisms are still ambiguous. In the present study, we scanned the regulatory and coding region of Nuclear LIM Interactor-Interacting Factor gene (NLI-IF), which is physically close to the tuberculosis-associated gene NRAMP1. Thirteen biallelic single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were identified from four ethnic populations (African–American, Caucasian, Hispanic, and Asian) with population-specific distribution of alleles. The extent of linkage disequilibrium (LD) between 402T>C, and 472−42G>A varied distinctly from complete LD in the non-African–American groups to strong but incomplete LD in African–Americans. Both SNPs were in significant LD with the polymorphism 3′ UTR in NRAMP1 among these ethnic groups (P < 0.02), except 402T>C in African–Americans. In a case-control study with a Caucasian population, three cosmopolitan SNPs (204C>A, 402T>C and 472−42G>A) in NLI-IF showed no significant association with human susceptibility to tuberculosis. Our results support the "out-of-Africa" model of human origin, and suggest the time for the common ancestor dispersing from Africa could not have been more than approximately 385,620 years ago. Received: December 13, 2001 / Accepted: January 8, 2002 |
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Keywords: | NLI-IF NRAMP1 Linkage disequilibrium Single-nucleotide polymorphism Human origin Tuberculosis |
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