129 results on '"Via, Marc"'
Search Results
2. Schizophrenia polygenic risk score in psychosis proneness
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Mas-Bermejo, Patricia, Papiol, Sergi, Via, Marc, Rovira, Paula, Torrecilla, Pilar, Kwapil, Thomas R., Barrantes-Vidal, Neus, and Rosa, Araceli
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- 2023
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3. Ancestry-related assortative mating in latino populations
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Risch, Neil, Choudhry, Shweta, Via, Marc, Basu, Analabha, Sebro, Ronnie, Eng, Celeste, Beckman, Kenneth, Thyne, Shannon, Chapela, Rocio, Rodriguez-Santana, Jose R, Rodriguez-Cintron, William, Avila, Pedro C, Ziv, Elad, and Gonzalez Burchard, Esteban
- Abstract
Abstract Background While spouse correlations have been documented for numerous traits, no prior studies have assessed assortative mating for genetic ancestry in admixed populations. Results Using 104 ancestry informative markers, we examined spouse correlations in genetic ancestry for Mexican spouse pairs recruited from Mexico City and the San Francisco Bay Area, and Puerto Rican spouse pairs recruited from Puerto Rico and New York City. In the Mexican pairs, we found strong spouse correlations for European and Native American ancestry, but no correlation in African ancestry. In the Puerto Rican pairs, we found significant spouse correlations for African ancestry and European ancestry but not Native American ancestry. Correlations were not attributable to variation in socioeconomic status or geographic heterogeneity. Past evidence of spouse correlation was also seen in the strong evidence of linkage disequilibrium between unlinked markers, which was accounted for in regression analysis by ancestral allele frequency difference at the pair of markers (European versus Native American for Mexicans, European versus African for Puerto Ricans). We also observed an excess of homozygosity at individual markers within the spouses, but this provided weaker evidence, as expected, of spouse correlation. Ancestry variance is predicted to decline in each generation, but less so under assortative mating. We used the current observed variances of ancestry to infer even stronger patterns of spouse ancestry correlation in previous generations. Conclusions Assortative mating related to genetic ancestry persists in Latino populations to the current day, and has impacted on the genomic structure in these populations.
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- 2009
4. Genetic Variants at the 9p21.3 Locus Are Associated with Risk for Non-Compressible Artery Disease: Results from the ARTPER Study.
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Via, Marc, Pera, Guillem, Forés, Rosa, Costa-Garrido, Anna, Heras, Antonio, Baena-Díez, José Miguel, Pedrosa, Edurne, Clemente, Inmaculada C., Lamonja-Vicente, Noemí, Mataró, Maria, Torán-Montserrat, Pere, and Alzamora, M. Teresa
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ARTERIAL diseases , *GENETIC variation , *PERIPHERAL vascular diseases , *ANKLE brachial index , *SYMPTOMS - Abstract
Peripheral artery disease (PAD) and non-compressible artery disease (NCAD) constitute predictors of subclinical atherosclerosis easily assessed through the ankle brachial index (ABI). Although both diseases show substantial genetic influences, few genetic association studies have focused on the ABI and PAD, and none have focused on NCAD. To overcome these limitations, we assessed the role of several candidate genes on the ABI, both in its continuous distribution and in the clinical manifestations associated to its extreme values: PAD and NCAD. We examined 13 candidate genomic regions in 1606 participants from the ARTPER study, a prospective population-based cohort, with the ABI assessed through ultrasonography. Association analyses were conducted independently for individuals with PAD (ABI < 0.9) or with NCAD (ABI > 1.4) vs. healthy participants. After including potential covariates and correction for multiple testing, minor alleles in the genetic markers rs10757278 and rs1333049, both in the 9p21.3 region, were significantly associated with a decreased risk of NCAD. Associations with the ABI showed limited support to these results. No significant associations were detected for PAD. The locus 9p21.3 constitutes the first genetic locus associated with NCAD, an assessment of subclinical atherosclerosis feasible for implementation in primary healthcare settings that has been systematically neglected from genetic studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Pacifiplex: an ancestry-informative SNP panel centred on Australia and the Pacific region
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Santos, Carla, Phillips, Christopher, Fondevila, Manuel, Daniel, Runa, van Oorschot, Roland A.H., Burchard, Esteban G., Schanfield, Moses S., Souto, Luis, Uacyisrael, Jolame, Via, Marc, Carracedo, Ángel, and Lareu, Maria V.
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- 2016
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6. The genetics of Mexico recapitulates Native American substructure and affects biomedical traits
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Moreno-Estrada, Andrés, Gignoux, Christopher R., Fernández-López, Juan Carlos, Zakharia, Fouad, Sikora, Martin, Contreras, Alejandra V., Acuña-Alonzo, Victor, Sandoval, Karla, Eng, Celeste, Romero-Hidalgo, Sandra, Ortiz-Tello, Patricia, Robles, Victoria, Kenny, Eimear E., Nuño-Arana, Ismael, Barquera-Lozano, Rodrigo, Macín-Pérez, Gastón, Granados-Arriola, Julio, Huntsman, Scott, Galanter, Joshua M., Via, Marc, Ford, Jean G., Chapela, Rocío, Rodriguez-Cintron, William, Rodríguez-Santana, Jose R., Romieu, Isabelle, Sienra-Monge, Juan José, del Rio Navarro, Blanca, London, Stephanie J., Ruiz-Linares, Andrés, Garcia-Herrera, Rodrigo, Estrada, Karol, Hidalgo-Miranda, Alfredo, Jimenez-Sanchez, Gerardo, Carnevale, Alessandra, Soberón, Xavier, Canizales-Quinteros, Samuel, Rangel-Villalobos, Héctor, Silva-Zolezzi, Irma, Burchard, Esteban Gonzalez, and Bustamante, Carlos D.
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- 2014
7. Association of GWAS Top Genes With Late-Onset Alzheimer’s Disease in Colombian Population
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Moreno, Diana Jennifer, Ruiz, Susana, Ríos, Ángela, Lopera, Francisco, Ostos, Henry, Via, Marc, and Bedoya, Gabriel
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- 2017
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8. ALOX5AP and LTA4H polymorphisms modify augmentation of bronchodilator responsiveness by leukotriene modifiers in Latinos
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Tcheurekdjian, Haig, Via, Marc, De Giacomo, Anthony, Corvol, Harriet, Eng, Celeste, Thyne, Shannon, Chapela, Rocio, Rodriguez-Cintron, William, Rodriguez-Santana, Jose R., Avila, Pedro C., and Burchard, Esteban González
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- 2010
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9. A global reference for human genetic variation
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Altshuler, David M., (Co-Chair), Durbin, Richard M., (Co-Chair, Principal Investigator), Donnelly, Peter, Green, Eric D., Nickerson, Deborah A., Boerwinkle, Eric, Doddapaneni, Harsha, Han, Yi, Korchina, Viktoriya, Kovar, Christie, Lee, Sandra, Muzny, Donna, Reid, Jeffrey G., Zhu, Yiming, Wang, Jun, (Principal Investigator), Chang, Yuqi, Feng, Qiang, Fang, Xiaodong, Guo, Xiaosen, Jian, Min, Jiang, Hui, Jin, Xin, Lan, Tianming, Li, Guoqing, Li, Jingxiang, Li, Yingrui, Liu, Shengmao, Liu, Xiao, Lu, Yao, Ma, Xuedi, Tang, Meifang, Wang, Bo, Wang, Guangbiao, Wu, Honglong, Wu, Renhua, Xu, Xun, Yin, Ye, Zhang, Dandan, Zhang, Wenwei, Zhao, Jiao, Zhao, Meiru, Zheng, Xiaole, Lander, Eric S., (Principal Investigator), Gabriel, Stacey B., (Co-Chair), Gupta, Namrata, Gharani, Neda, Toji, Lorraine H., Gerry, Norman P., Resch, Alissa M., Barker, Jonathan, Gil, Laurent, Hunt, Sarah E., Kelman, Gavin, Kulesha, Eugene, Leinonen, Rasko, McLaren, William M., Radhakrishnan, Rajesh, Roa, Asier, Smirnov, Dmitriy, Smith, Richard E., Streeter, Ian, Thormann, Anja, Toneva, Iliana, Vaughan, Brendan, Zheng-Bradley, Xiangqun, Bentley, David R., (Principal Investigator), Grocock, Russell, Humphray, Sean, James, Terena, Kingsbury, Zoya, Lehrach, Hans, (Principal Investigator), Sudbrak, Ralf, (Project Leader), Albrecht, Marcus W., Amstislavskiy, Vyacheslav S., Borodina, Tatiana A., Lienhard, Matthias, Mertes, Florian, Sultan, Marc, Timmermann, Bernd, Yaspo, Marie-Laure, Mardis, Elaine R., (Co-Principal Investigator) (Co-Chair), Wilson, Richard K., (Co-Principal Investigator), Fulton, Lucinda, Fulton, Robert, Ananiev, Victor, Belaia, Zinaida, Beloslyudtsev, Dimitriy, Bouk, Nathan, Chen, Chao, Church, Deanna, Cohen, Robert, Cook, Charles, Garner, John, Hefferon, Timothy, Kimelman, Mikhail, Liu, Chunlei, Lopez, John, Meric, Peter, O’Sullivan, Chris, Ostapchuk, Yuri, Phan, Lon, Ponomarov, Sergiy, Schneider, Valerie, Shekhtman, Eugene, Sirotkin, Karl, Slotta, Douglas, Zhang, Hua, Balasubramaniam, Senduran, Burton, John, Danecek, Petr, Keane, Thomas M., Kolb-Kokocinski, Anja, McCarthy, Shane, Stalker, James, Quail, Michael, Schmidt, Jeanette P., (Principal Investigator), Davies, Christopher J., Gollub, Jeremy, Webster, Teresa, Wong, Brant, Zhan, Yiping, Auton, Adam, (Principal Investigator), Campbell, Christopher L., Kong, Yu, Marcketta, Anthony, Yu, Fuli, (Project Leader), Antunes, Lilian, Bainbridge, Matthew, Sabo, Aniko, Huang, Zhuoyi, Coin, Lachlan J. M., Fang, Lin, Li, Qibin, Li, Zhenyu, Lin, Haoxiang, Liu, Binghang, Luo, Ruibang, Shao, Haojing, Xie, Yinlong, Ye, Chen, Yu, Chang, Zhang, Fan, Zheng, Hancheng, Zhu, Hongmei, Alkan, Can, Dal, Elif, Kahveci, Fatma, Garrison, Erik P., (Project Lead), Kural, Deniz, Lee, Wan-Ping, Leong, Wen Fung, Stromberg, Michael, Ward, Alistair N., Wu, Jiantao, Zhang, Mengyao, Daly, Mark J., (Principal Investigator), DePristo, Mark A., (Project Leader), Handsaker, Robert E., (Project Leader), Banks, Eric, Bhatia, Gaurav, del Angel, Guillermo, Genovese, Giulio, Li, Heng, Kashin, Seva, Nemesh, James C., Poplin, Ryan E., Yoon, Seungtai C., (Principal Investigator), Lihm, Jayon, Makarov, Vladimir, Clark, Andrew G., (Principal Investigator), Gottipati, Srikanth, Keinan, Alon, Rodriguez-Flores, Juan L., Rausch, Tobias, (Project Leader), Fritz, Markus H., Stütz, Adrian M., Beal, Kathryn, Datta, Avik, Herrero, Javier, Ritchie, Graham R. S., Zerbino, Daniel, Sabeti, Pardis C., (Principal Investigator), Shlyakhter, Ilya, Schaffner, Stephen F., Vitti, Joseph, Cooper, David N., (Principal Investigator), Ball, Edward V., Stenson, Peter D., Barnes, Bret, Bauer, Markus, Cheetham, Keira R., Cox, Anthony, Eberle, Michael, Kahn, Scott, Murray, Lisa, Peden, John, Shaw, Richard, Kenny, Eimear E., (Principal Investigator), Batzer, Mark A., (Principal Investigator), Konkel, Miriam K., Walker, Jerilyn A., MacArthur, Daniel G., (Principal Investigator), Lek, Monkol, Herwig, Ralf, Koboldt, Daniel C., Larson, David, Ye, Kai, Gravel, Simon, Swaroop, Anand, Chew, Emily, Lappalainen, Tuuli, (Principal Investigator), Erlich, Yaniv, (Principal Investigator), Gymrek, Melissa, Willems, Thomas Frederick, Simpson, Jared T., Shriver, Mark D., (Principal Investigator), Rosenfeld, Jeffrey A., (Principal Investigator), Montgomery, Stephen B., (Principal Investigator), De La Vega, Francisco M., (Principal Investigator), Byrnes, Jake K., Carroll, Andrew W., DeGorter, Marianne K., Lacroute, Phil, Maples, Brian K., Martin, Alicia R., Moreno-Estrada, Andres, Shringarpure, Suyash S., Zakharia, Fouad, Halperin, Eran, (Principal Investigator), Baran, Yael, Cerveira, Eliza, Hwang, Jaeho, Malhotra, Ankit, (Co-Project Lead), Plewczynski, Dariusz, Radew, Kamen, Romanovitch, Mallory, Zhang, Chengsheng, (Co-Project Lead), Hyland, Fiona C. L., Craig, David W., (Principal Investigator), Christoforides, Alexis, Homer, Nils, Izatt, Tyler, Kurdoglu, Ahmet A., Sinari, Shripad A., Squire, Kevin, Xiao, Chunlin, Sebat, Jonathan, (Principal Investigator), Antaki, Danny, Gujral, Madhusudan, Noor, Amina, Ye, Kenny, Burchard, Esteban G., (Principal Investigator), Hernandez, Ryan D., (Principal Investigator), Gignoux, Christopher R., Haussler, David, (Principal Investigator), Katzman, Sol J., Kent, James W., Howie, Bryan, Ruiz-Linares, Andres, (Principal Investigator), Dermitzakis, Emmanouil T., (Principal Investigator), Devine, Scott E., (Principal Investigator), Abecasis, Gonçalo R., (Principal Investigator) (Co-Chair), Kang, Hyun Min, (Project Leader), Kidd, Jeffrey M., (Principal Investigator), Blackwell, Tom, Caron, Sean, Chen, Wei, Emery, Sarah, Fritsche, Lars, Fuchsberger, Christian, Jun, Goo, Li, Bingshan, Lyons, Robert, Scheller, Chris, Sidore, Carlo, Song, Shiya, Sliwerska, Elzbieta, Taliun, Daniel, Tan, Adrian, Welch, Ryan, Wing, Mary Kate, Zhan, Xiaowei, Awadalla, Philip, (Principal Investigator), Hodgkinson, Alan, Li, Yun, Shi, Xinghua, (Principal Investigator), Quitadamo, Andrew, Lunter, Gerton, (Principal Investigator), McVean, Gil A., (Principal Investigator) (Co-Chair), Marchini, Jonathan L., (Principal Investigator), Myers, Simon, (Principal Investigator), Churchhouse, Claire, Delaneau, Olivier, Gupta-Hinch, Anjali, Kretzschmar, Warren, Iqbal, Zamin, Mathieson, Iain, Menelaou, Androniki, Rimmer, Andy, Xifara, Dionysia K., Oleksyk, Taras K., (Principal Investigator), Fu, Yunxin, (Principal Investigator), Liu, Xiaoming, Xiong, Momiao, Jorde, Lynn, (Principal Investigator), Witherspoon, David, Xing, Jinchuan, Browning, Brian L., (Principal Investigator), Browning, Sharon R., (Principal Investigator), Hormozdiari, Fereydoun, Sudmant, Peter H., Khurana, Ekta, (Principal Investigator), Hurles, Matthew E., (Principal Investigator), Albers, Cornelis A., Ayub, Qasim, Chen, Yuan, Colonna, Vincenza, Jostins, Luke, Walter, Klaudia, Xue, Yali, Abyzov, Alexej, Balasubramanian, Suganthi, Chen, Jieming, Clarke, Declan, Fu, Yao, Harmanci, Arif O., Jin, Mike, Lee, Donghoon, Liu, Jeremy, Mu, Xinmeng Jasmine, Zhang, Jing, Zhang, Yan, McCarroll, Steven A., (Principal Investigator), Hartl, Chris, Shakir, Khalid, Degenhardt, Jeremiah, Korbel, Jan O., (Principal Investigator) (Co-Chair), Meiers, Sascha, Raeder, Benjamin, Casale, Francesco Paolo, Stegle, Oliver, Lameijer, Eric-Wubbo, Ding, Li, (Principal Investigator), Hall, Ira, Lee, Charles, (Principal Investigator) (Co-Chair), Bafna, Vineet, Michaelson, Jacob, Gardner, Eugene J., (Project Leader), Mills, Ryan E., (Principal Investigator), Dayama, Gargi, Chen, Ken, (Principle Investigator), Fan, Xian, Chong, Zechen, Chen, Tenghui, Eichler, Evan E., (Principal Investigator) (Co-Chair), Chaisson, Mark J., Huddleston, John, Malig, Maika, Nelson, Bradley J., Parrish, Nicholas F., Blackburne, Ben, Lindsay, Sarah J., Ning, Zemin, Zhang, Yujun, Lam, Hugo, Sisu, Cristina, Gibbs, Richard A., (Principal Investigator) (Co-Chair), Challis, Danny, Evani, Uday S., Lu, James, Nagaswamy, Uma, Yu, Jin, Li, Wangshen, Marth, Gabor T., (Principal Investigator) (Co-Chair), Habegger, Lukas, Yu, Haiyuan, (Principal Investigator), Cunningham, Fiona, Dunham, Ian, Lage, Kasper, (Principal Investigator), Jespersen, Jakob Berg, Horn, Heiko, Tyler-Smith, Chris, (Principal Investigator) (Co-Chair), Gerstein, Mark B., (Principal Investigator) (Co-Chair), Kim, Donghoon, Desalle, Rob, Narechania, Apurva, Wilson Sayres, Melissa A., Bustamante, Carlos D., (Principal Investigator) (Co-Chair), Mendez, Fernando L., Poznik, David G., Underhill, Peter A., Coin, Lachlan, (Principal Investigator), Mittelman, David, Banerjee, Ruby, Cerezo, Maria, Fitzgerald, Thomas W., Louzada, Sandra, Massaia, Andrea, Ritchie, Graham R., Yang, Fengtang, Kalra, Divya, Hale, Walker, Dan, Xu, Flicek, Paul, (Principal Investigator) (Co-Chair), Clarke, Laura, (Project Lead), Sherry, Stephen T., (Principal Investigator) (Co-Chair), Chakravarti, Aravinda, (Co-Chair), Knoppers, Bartha M., (Co-Chair), Barnes, Kathleen C., Beiswanger, Christine, Cai, Hongyu, Cao, Hongzhi, Henn, Brenna, Jones, Danielle, Kaye, Jane S., Kent, Alastair, Kerasidou, Angeliki, Mathias, Rasika, Ossorio, Pilar N., Parker, Michael, Rotimi, Charles N., Royal, Charmaine D., Sandoval, Karla, Su, Yeyang, Tian, Zhongming, Tishkoff, Sarah, Via, Marc, Wang, Yuhong, Yang, Ling, Zhu, Jiayong, Bodmer, Walter, Bedoya, Gabriel, Cai, Zhiming, Gao, Yang, Chu, Jiayou, Peltonen, Leena, Garcia-Montero, Andres, Orfao, Alberto, Dutil, Julie, Martinez-Cruzado, Juan C., Mathias, Rasika A., Hennis, Anselm, Watson, Harold, McKenzie, Colin, Qadri, Firdausi, LaRocque, Regina, Deng, Xiaoyan, Asogun, Danny, Folarin, Onikepe, Happi, Christian, Omoniwa, Omonwunmi, Stremlau, Matt, Tariyal, Ridhi, Jallow, Muminatou, Joof, Fatoumatta Sisay, Corrah, Tumani, Rockett, Kirk, Kwiatkowski, Dominic, Kooner, Jaspal, Hiê`n, Trâ`n Tinh, Dunstan, Sarah J., Hang, Nguyen Thuy, Fonnie, Richard, Garry, Robert, Kanneh, Lansana, Moses, Lina, Schieffelin, John, Grant, Donald S., Gallo, Carla, Poletti, Giovanni, Saleheen, Danish, Rasheed, Asif, Brooks, Lisa D., Felsenfeld, Adam L., McEwen, Jean E., Vaydylevich, Yekaterina, Duncanson, Audrey, Dunn, Michael, Schloss, Jeffery A., and Yang, Huanming
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- 2015
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10. Effects and mechanisms of mindfulness training and physical exercise on cognition, emotional wellbeing, and brain outcomes in chronic stroke patients: Study protocol of the MindFit project randomized controlled trial.
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Bermudo-Gallaguet, Adrià, Ariza, Mar, Dacosta-Aguayo, Rosalia, Agudelo, Daniela, Camins-Vila, Neus, Boldó, Maria, Carrera, Òscar, Vidal, Sandra, Ferrer-Uris, Blai, Busquets, Albert, Via, Marc, Pera, Guillem, Cáceres, Cynthia, Gomis, Meritxell, García-Molina, Alberto, María Tormos, José, Arrabé, Ana, Diez, Gustavo, Durà Mata, Maria José, and Torán-Monserrat, Pere
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MINDFULNESS ,WELL-being ,CHRONIC diseases ,COGNITION ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,EXERCISE ,STROKE patients ,EMOTIONS - Abstract
Background: Post-stroke cognitive and emotional complications are frequent in the chronic stages of stroke and have important implications for the functionality and quality of life of those affected and their caregivers. Strategies such as mindfulness meditation, physical exercise (PE), or computerized cognitive training (CCT) may benefit stroke patients by impacting neuroplasticity and brain health. Materials and methods: One hundred and forty-one chronic stroke patients are randomly allocated to receive mindfulness-based stress reduction + CCT (n = 47), multicomponent PE program + CCT (n = 47), or CCT alone (n = 47). Interventions consist of 12-week home-based programs five days per week. Before and after the interventions, we collect data from cognitive, psychological, and physical tests, blood and stool samples, and structural and functional brain scans. Results: The effects of the interventions on cognitive and emotional outcomes will be described in intention-to-treat and per-protocol analyses. We will also explore potential mediators and moderators, such as genetic, molecular, brain, demographic, and clinical factors in our perprotocol sample. Discussion: The MindFit Project is a randomized clinical trial that aims to assess the impact of mindfulness and PE combined with CCT on chronic stroke patients’ cognitive and emotional wellbeing. Furthermore, our design takes a multimodal biopsychosocial approach that will generate new knowledge at multiple levels of evidence, from molecular bases to behavioral changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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11. Population relationships in the Mediterranean revealed by autosomal genetic data (Alu and Alu/STR compound systems)
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Gonzalez-Perez, Emili, Esteban, Esther, Via, Marc, Gaya-Vidal, Magdalena, Athanasiadis, Georgios, Dugoujon, Jean Michel, Luna, Francisco, Mesa, Maria Soledad, Fuster, Vicente, Kandil, Mostafa, Harich, Nourdin, Bissar-Tadmouri, Nisrine, Saetta, Angela, and Moral, Pedro
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Genetic research -- Analysis ,Permeability -- Analysis ,Anthropology/archeology/folklore - Abstract
The variation of 18 Alu polymorphisms and 3 linked STRs was determined in 1,831 individuals from 15 Mediterranean populations to analyze the relationships between human groups in this geographical region and provide a complementary perspective to information from studies based on uniparental markers. Patterns of population diversity revealed by the two kinds of markers examined were different from one another, likely in relation to their different mutation rates. Therefore, while the Alu biallelic variation underlies general heterogeneity throughout the whole Mediterranean region, the combined use of Alu and STR points to a con siderable genetic differentiation between the two Mediterranean shores, presumably strengthened by a considerable sub-Saharan African genetic contribution in North Africa (around 13% calculated from Alu markers). Gene flow analysis confirms the permeability of the Sahara to human passage along with the existence of trans-Mediterranean interchanges. Two specific Alu/STR combinations--CD4 110(-) and DM 107(-)--detected in all North African samples, the Iberian Peninsula, Greece, Turkey, and some Mediterranean islands suggest an ancient genetic background of current Mediterranean peoples. Am J Phys Anthropol 141:430-439, 2010. KEY WORDS Berber; genetic admixture; haplotypes; Sahara DOI 10.1002/ajpa.21161
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- 2010
12. HUMAN GENETICS: The genetics of Mexico recapitulates Native American substructure and affects biomedical traits
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Moreno-Estrada, Andrés, Gignoux, Christopher R., Fernández-López, Juan Carlos, Zakharia, Fouad, Sikora, Martin, Contreras, Alejandra V., Acuña-Alonzo, Victor, Sandoval, Karla, Eng, Celeste, Romero-Hidalgo, Sandra, Ortiz-Tello, Patricia, Robles, Victoria, Kenny, Eimear E., Nuño-Arana, Ismael, Barquera-Lozano, Rodrigo, Macín-Pérez, Gastón, Granados-Arriola, Julio, Huntsman, Scott, Galanter, Joshua M., Via, Marc, Ford, Jean G., Chapela, Rocío, Rodriguez-Cintron, William, Rodríguez-Santana, Jose R., Romieu, Isabelle, Sienra-Monge, Juan José, del Rio Navarro, Blanca, London, Stephanie J., Ruiz-Linares, Andrés, Garcia-Herrera, Rodrigo, Estrada, Karol, Hidalgo-Miranda, Alfredo, Jimenez-Sanchez, Gerardo, Carnevale, Alessandra, Soberón, Xavier, Canizales-Quinteros, Samuel, Rangel-Villalobos, Hector, Silva-Zolezzi, Irma, Burchard, Esteban Gonzalez, and Bustamante, Carlos D.
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- 2014
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13. Androgen receptor CAG and GGC polymorphisms in Mediterraneans: repeat dynamics and population relationships
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Esteban, Esther, Rodon, Natalia, Via, Marc, Gonzalez-Perez, Emili, Santamaria, Josep, Dugoujon, Jean-Michel, Chennawi, Farha El, Melhaoui, Mohamed, Cherkaoui, Mohamed, Vona, Giuseppe, Harich, Nourdin, and Moral, Pedro
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- 2006
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14. Role of interactions in pharmacogenetic studies: leukotrienes in asthma
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Via, Marc, Tcheurekdjian, Haig, and González Burchard, Esteban
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- 2013
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15. An integrated map of genetic variation from 1,092 human genomes
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McVean, Gil A., Altshuler, David M., Durbin, Richard M., Abecasis, Gonçalo R., Bentley, David R., Chakravarti, Aravinda, Clark, Andrew G., Donnelly, Peter, Eichler, Evan E., Flicek, Paul, Gabriel, Stacey B., Gibbs, Richard A., Green, Eric D., Hurles, Matthew E., Knoppers, Bartha M., Korbel, Jan O., Lander, Eric S., Lee, Charles, Lehrach, Hans, Mardis, Elaine R., Marth, Gabor T., Nickerson, Deborah A., Schmidt, Jeanette P., Sherry, Stephen T., Wang, Jun, Wilson, Richard K., Dinh, Huyen, Kovar, Christie, Lee, Sandra, Lewis, Lora, Muzny, Donna, Reid, Jeff, Wang, Min, Wang, Jun, Fang, Xiaodong, Guo, Xiaosen, Jian, Min, Jiang, Hui, Jin, Xin, Li, Guoqing, Li, Jingxiang, Li, Yingrui, Li, Zhuo, Liu, Xiao, Lu, Yao, Ma, Xuedi, Su, Zhe, Tai, Shuaishuai, Tang, Meifang, Wang, Bo, Wang, Guangbiao, Wu, Honglong, Wu, Renhua, Yin, Ye, Zhang, Wenwei, Zhao, Jiao, Zhao, Meiru, Zheng, Xiaole, Zhou, Yan, Lander, Eric S., Gabriel, Stacey B., Gupta, Namrata, Flicek, Paul, Clarke, Laura, Leinonen, Rasko, Smith, Richard E., Zheng-Bradley, Xiangqun, Bentley, David R., Grocock, Russell, Humphray, Sean, James, Terena, Kingsbury, Zoya, Lehrach, Hans, Sudbrak, Ralf, Albrecht, Marcus W., Amstislavskiy, Vyacheslav S., Borodina, Tatiana A., Lienhard, Matthias, Mertes, Florian, Sultan, Marc, Timmermann, Bernd, Yaspo, Marie-Laure, Sherry, Stephen T., McVean, Gil A., Mardis, Elaine R., Wilson, Richard K., Fulton, Lucinda, Fulton, Robert, Weinstock, George M., Durbin, Richard M., Balasubramaniam, Senduran, Burton, John, Danecek, Petr, Keane, Thomas M., Kolb-Kokocinski, Anja, McCarthy, Shane, Stalker, James, Quail, Michael, Schmidt, Jeanette P., Davies, Christopher J., Gollub, Jeremy, Webster, Teresa, Wong, Brant, Zhan, Yiping, Auton, Adam, Yu, Fuli, Bainbridge, Matthew, Challis, Danny, Evani, Uday S., Lu, James, Nagaswamy, Uma, Sabo, Aniko, Wang, Yi, Yu, Jin, Coin, Lachlan J. M., Fang, Lin, Li, Qibin, Li, Zhenyu, Lin, Haoxiang, Liu, Binghang, Luo, Ruibang, Qin, Nan, Shao, Haojing, Wang, Bingqiang, Xie, Yinlong, Ye, Chen, Yu, Chang, Zhang, Fan, Zheng, Hancheng, Zhu, Hongmei, Garrison, Erik P., Kural, Deniz, Lee, Wan-Ping, Fung Leong, Wen, Ward, Alistair N., Wu, Jiantao, Zhang, Mengyao, Lee, Charles, Griffin, Lauren, Hsieh, Chih-Heng, Mills, Ryan E., Shi, Xinghua, von Grotthuss, Marcin, Zhang, Chengsheng, Daly, Mark J., DePristo, Mark A., Banks, Eric, Bhatia, Gaurav, Carneiro, Mauricio O., del Angel, Guillermo, Genovese, Giulio, Handsaker, Robert E., Hartl, Chris, McCarroll, Steven A., Nemesh, James C., Poplin, Ryan E., Schaffner, Stephen F., Shakir, Khalid, Yoon, Seungtai C., Lihm, Jayon, Makarov, Vladimir, Jin, Hanjun, Kim, Wook, Cheol Kim, Ki, Korbel, Jan O., Rausch, Tobias, Beal, Kathryn, Cunningham, Fiona, Herrero, Javier, McLaren, William M., Ritchie, Graham R. S., Clark, Andrew G., Gottipati, Srikanth, Keinan, Alon, Rodriguez-Flores, Juan L., Sabeti, Pardis C., Grossman, Sharon R., Tabrizi, Shervin, Tariyal, Ridhi, Cooper, David N., Ball, Edward V., Stenson, Peter D., Barnes, Bret, Bauer, Markus, Keira Cheetham, R., Cox, Tony, Eberle, Michael, Kahn, Scott, Murray, Lisa, Peden, John, Shaw, Richard, Ye, Kai, Batzer, Mark A., Konkel, Miriam K., Walker, Jerilyn A., MacArthur, Daniel G., Lek, Monkol, Sudbrak, Herwig, Ralf, Shriver, Mark D., Bustamante, Carlos D., Byrnes, Jake K., De La Vega, Francisco M., Gravel, Simon, Kenny, Eimear E., Kidd, Jeffrey M., Lacroute, Phil, Maples, Brian K., Moreno-Estrada, Andres, Zakharia, Fouad, Halperin, Eran, Baran, Yael, Craig, David W., Christoforides, Alexis, Homer, Nils, Izatt, Tyler, Kurdoglu, Ahmet A., Sinari, Shripad A., Squire, Kevin, Xiao, Chunlin, Sebat, Jonathan, Bafna, Vineet, Ye, Kenny, Burchard, Esteban G., Hernandez, Ryan D., Gignoux, Christopher R., Haussler, David, Katzman, Sol J., James Kent, W., Howie, Bryan, Ruiz-Linares, Andres, Dermitzakis, Emmanouil T., Lappalainen, Tuuli, Devine, Scott E., Liu, Xinyue, Maroo, Ankit, Tallon, Luke J., Rosenfeld, Jeffrey A., Min Kang, Hyun, Anderson, Paul, Angius, Andrea, Bigham, Abigail, Blackwell, Tom, Busonero, Fabio, Cucca, Francesco, Fuchsberger, Christian, Jones, Chris, Jun, Goo, Li, Yun, Lyons, Robert, Maschio, Andrea, Porcu, Eleonora, Reinier, Fred, Sanna, Serena, Schlessinger, David, Sidore, Carlo, Tan, Adrian, Kate Trost, Mary, Awadalla, Philip, Hodgkinson, Alan, Lunter, Gerton, McVean, Gil A., Marchini, Jonathan L., Myers, Simon, Churchhouse, Claire, Delaneau, Olivier, Gupta-Hinch, Anjali, Iqbal, Zamin, Mathieson, Iain, Rimmer, Andy, Xifara, Dionysia K., Oleksyk, Taras K., Fu, Yunxin, Liu, Xiaoming, Xiong, Momiao, Jorde, Lynn, Witherspoon, David, Xing, Jinchuan, Eichler, Evan E., Browning, Brian L., Alkan, Can, Hajirasouliha, Iman, Hormozdiari, Fereydoun, Ko, Arthur, Sudmant, Peter H., Mardis, Elaine R., Chen, Ken, Chinwalla, Asif, Ding, Li, Dooling, David, Koboldt, Daniel C., McLellan, Michael D., Wallis, John W., Wendl, Michael C., Zhang, Qunyuan, Hurles, Matthew E., Tyler-Smith, Chris, Albers, Cornelis A., Ayub, Qasim, Chen, Yuan, Coffey, Alison J., Colonna, Vincenza, Huang, Ni, Jostins, Luke, Li, Heng, Scally, Aylwyn, Walter, Klaudia, Xue, Yali, Zhang, Yujun, Gerstein, Mark B., Abyzov, Alexej, Balasubramanian, Suganthi, Chen, Jieming, Clarke, Declan, Fu, Yao, Habegger, Lukas, Harmanci, Arif O., Jin, Mike, Khurana, Ekta, Jasmine Mu, Xinmeng, Sisu, Cristina, Lee, Charles, McCarroll, Steven A., Degenhardt, Jeremiah, Korbel, Jan O., Stütz, Adrian M., Church, Deanna, Michaelson, Jacob J., Eichler, Evan E., Hurles, Matthew E., Blackburne, Ben, Lindsay, Sarah J., Ning, Zemin, DePristo, Mark A., Min Kang, Hyun, Mardis, Elaine R., Yu, Fuli, Michelson, Leslie P., Tyler-Smith, Chris, Frankish, Adam, Harrow, Jennifer, Fowler, Gerald, Hale, Walker, Kalra, Divya, Flicek, Paul, Clarke, Laura, Barker, Jonathan, Kelman, Gavin, Kulesha, Eugene, Radhakrishnan, Rajesh, Roa, Asier, Smirnov, Dmitriy, Streeter, Ian, Toneva, Iliana, Vaughan, Brendan, Sherry, Stephen T., Ananiev, Victor, Belaia, Zinaida, Beloslyudtsev, Dimitriy, Bouk, Nathan, Chen, Chao, Cohen, Robert, Cook, Charles, Garner, John, Hefferon, Timothy, Kimelman, Mikhail, Liu, Chunlei, Lopez, John, Meric, Peter, OʼSullivan, Chris, Ostapchuk, Yuri, Phan, Lon, Ponomarov, Sergiy, Schneider, Valerie, Shekhtman, Eugene, Sirotkin, Karl, Slotta, Douglas, Zhang, Hua, Chakravarti, Aravinda, Knoppers, Bartha M., Barnes, Kathleen C., Beiswanger, Christine, Burchard, Esteban G., Bustamante, Carlos D., Cai, Hongyu, Cao, Hongzhi, Durbin, Richard M., Gharani, Neda, Henn, Brenna, Jones, Danielle, Jorde, Lynn, Kaye, Jane S., Kent, Alastair, Kerasidou, Angeliki, Mathias, Rasika, Ossorio, Pilar N., Parker, Michael, Reich, David, Rotimi, Charles N., Royal, Charmaine D., Sandoval, Karla, Su, Yeyang, Sudbrak, Ralf, Tian, Zhongming, Tishkoff, Sarah, Toji, Lorraine H., Tyler-Smith, Chris, Via, Marc, Wang, Yuhong, Yang, Huanming, Yang, Ling, Zhu, Jiayong, Bodmer, Walter, Bedoya, Gabriel, Ruiz-Linares, Andres, Zhi Ming, Cai, Yang, Gao, Jia You, Chu, Peltonen, Leena, Garcia-Montero, Andres, Orfao, Alberto, Dutil, Julie, Martinez-Cruzado, Juan C., Oleksyk, Taras K., Brooks, Lisa D., Felsenfeld, Adam L., McEwen, Jean E., Clemm, Nicholas C., Duncanson, Audrey, Dunn, Michael, Guyer, Mark S., Peterson, Jane L., Abecasis, Goncalo R., and Auton, Adam
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- 2012
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16. Molecular and Brain Volume Changes Following Aerobic Exercise, Cognitive and Combined Training in Physically Inactive Healthy Late-Middle-Aged Adults: The Projecte Moviment Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Castells-Sánchez, Alba, Roig-Coll, Francesca, Dacosta-Aguayo, Rosalía, Lamonja-Vicente, Noemí, Torán-Monserrat, Pere, Pera, Guillem, García-Molina, Alberto, Tormos, José Maria, Montero-Alía, Pilar, Heras-Tébar, Antonio, Soriano-Raya, Juan José, Cáceres, Cynthia, Domènech, Sira, Via, Marc, Erickson, Kirk I., and Mataró, Maria
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MOLECULAR volume ,AEROBIC exercises ,COGNITIVE training ,BRAIN imaging ,VOXEL-based morphometry ,PHYSICAL activity ,ADULTS ,THIRST - Abstract
Behavioral interventions have shown promising neuroprotective effects, but the cascade of molecular, brain and behavioral changes involved in these benefits remains poorly understood. Projecte Moviment is a 12-week (5 days per week—45 min per day) multi-domain, single-blind, proof-of-concept randomized controlled trial examining the cognitive effect and underlying mechanisms of an aerobic exercise (AE), computerized cognitive training (CCT) and a combined (COMB) groups compared to a waitlist control group. Adherence was > 80% for 82/109 participants recruited (62% female; age = 58.38 ± 5.47). In this study we report intervention-related changes in plasma biomarkers (BDNF, TNF-α, HGF, ICAM-1, SDF1-α) and structural-MRI (brain volume) and how they related to changes in physical activity and individual variables (age and sex) and their potential role as mediators in the cognitive changes. Our results show that although there were no significant changes in molecular biomarker concentrations in any intervention group, changes in ICAM-1 and SDF1-α were negatively associated with changes in physical activity outcomes in AE and COMB groups. Brain volume changes were found in the CCT showing a significant increase in precuneus volume. Sex moderated the brain volume change in the AE and COMB groups, suggesting that men may benefit more than women. Changes in molecular biomarkers and brain volumes did not significantly mediate the cognitive-related benefits found previously for any group. This study shows crucial initial molecular and brain volume changes related to lifestyle interventions at early stages and highlights the value of examining activity parameters, individual difference characteristics and using a multi-level analysis approach to address these questions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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17. Apolipoprotein E/C1/C4/C2 Gene Cluster Diversity in Two Native Andean Populations: Aymaras and Quechuas
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Gayà-Vidal, Magdalena, Athanasiadis, Georgios, Carreras-Torres, Robert, Via, Marc, Esteban, Esther, Villena, Mercedes, Vasquez, René, Dugoujon, Jean-Michel, and Moral, Pedro
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- 2012
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18. Admixture mapping identifies a locus on 6q25 associated with breast cancer risk in US Latinas
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Fejerman, Laura, Chen, Gary K., Eng, Celeste, Huntsman, Scott, Hu, Donglei, Williams, Amy, Pasaniuc, Bogdan, John, Esther M., Via, Marc, Gignoux, Christopher, Ingles, Sue, Monroe, Kristine R., Kolonel, Laurence N., Torres-Mejía, Gabriela, Pérez-Stable, Eliseo J., González Burchard, Esteban, Henderson, Brian E., Haiman, Christopher A., and Ziv, Elad
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- 2012
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19. Augmentation of bronchodilator responsiveness by leukotriene modifiers in Puerto Rican and Mexican children
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Tcheurekdjian, Haig, Thyne, Shannon M., Williams, L Keoki, Via, Marc, Rodriguez-Santana, Jose R., Rodriguez-Cintron, William, Avila, Pedro C., and Burchard, Esteban González
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- 2009
20. E65 K polymorphism in KCNMB1 gene is not associated with ischaemic heart disease in Spanish patients
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Via, Marc, Valveny, Neus, López-Alomar, Antonio, Athanasiadis, Georgios, Pintó, Xavier, Domingo, Enric, Esteban, Esther, González-Pérez, Emili, and Moral, Pedro
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- 2005
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21. Cosmopolitan and ethnic-specific replication of genetic risk factors for asthma in 2 Latino populations
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Galanter, Joshua M., Torgerson, Dara, Gignoux, Christopher R., Sen, Saunak, Roth, Lindsey A., Via, Marc, Aldrich, Melinda C., Eng, Celeste, Huntsman, Scott, Rodriguez-Santana, Jose, Rodriguez-Cintrón, William, Chapela, Rocio, Ford, Jean G., and Burchard, Esteban G.
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- 2011
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22. Exercise and Fitness Neuroprotective Effects: Molecular, Brain Volume and Psychological Correlates and Their Mediating Role in Healthy Late-Middle-Aged Women and Men.
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Castells-Sánchez, Alba, Roig-Coll, Francesca, Dacosta-Aguayo, Rosalia, Lamonja-Vicente, Noemí, Sawicka, Angelika K., Torán-Monserrat, Pere, Pera, Guillem, Montero-Alía, Pilar, Heras-Tebar, Antonio, Domènech, Sira, Via, Marc, Erickson, Kirk I., and Mataró, Maria
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PARIETAL lobe ,NEUROPROTECTIVE agents ,TEMPORAL lobe ,PHYSICAL activity ,CARDIOPULMONARY fitness ,THIRST - Abstract
Background: Although exercise is known to have a neuroprotective effect in aging, the mediators underlying the exercise-cognition association remain poorly understood. In this paper we aimed to study the molecular, brain, and behavioral changes related to physical activity and their potential role as mediators. Methods: We obtained demographic, physical activity outcomes [sportive physical activity and cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF)], plasma biomarkers (TNF-α, ICAM-1, HGF, SDF1-α, and BDNF), structural-MRI (brain volume areas), psychological and sleep health (mood, depressive and distress symptoms, and sleep quality), and multi-domain cognitive data from 115 adults aged 50–70 years. We conducted linear regression models and mediation analyses stratifying results by sex in a final sample of 104 individuals [65 women (age = 56.75 ± 4.96) and 39 men (age = 58.59 ± 5.86)]. Results: Women engaging in greater amounts of exercising showed lower TNF-α levels and greater dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and temporal lobe volumes. Men engaging in greater amounts of exercise showed greater temporal lobe volumes. CRF levels were not related to any of the analyzed outcomes in women but in men higher CRF was associated with lower TNF-α, HGF and ventricle volumes, greater volume of temporal and parietal lobes and fewer depressive symptoms and better mood. In men, reduced TNF-α and HGF levels mediated brain and cognitive CRF-related benefits. Conclusion: Our results show that exercise is a promising approach for influencing inflammation and brain volume and also contributes to ongoing discussions about the physiological mediators for the association between CRF and cognition in men. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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23. Sex-Specific Protective Effects of APOE ε2 on Cognitive Performance.
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Lamonja-Vicente, Noemí, Dacosta-Aguayo, Rosalia, López-Olóriz, Jorge, Prades-Senovilla, Laia, Roig-Coll, Francesca, Castells-Sánchez, Alba, Soriano-Raya, Juan José, Clemente, Inmaculada, Miralbell, Júlia, Barrios, Maite, López-Cancio, Elena, Cáceres, Cynthia, Arenillas, Juan Francisco, Millán, Mónica, Torán, Pere, Pera, Guillem, Fores, Rosa, Alzamora, Maria Teresa, Mataró, Maria, and Via, Marc
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BRAIN-derived neurotrophic factor ,COGNITIVE aging ,C-reactive protein ,APOLIPOPROTEIN E ,COGNITION ,SEX distribution ,APOLIPOPROTEINS ,GENOTYPES ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Apolipoprotein E (APOE) has an important role in the multiple trajectories of cognitive aging. However, environmental variables and other genes mediate the impact of APOE on cognition. Our main objective was to analyze the effect of APOE genotype on cognition and its interactions and relationships with sex, age, lipid profile, C-reactive protein, and Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) genotype in a sample of 648 healthy participants over 50 years of age with a comprehensive neuropsychological assessment. Our results showed that APOE ε2 carriers performed better in the Verbal Memory (p = .002) and Fluency Domains (p = .001). When we studied the effect of sex, we observed that the beneficial effect of APOE ε2 on the normalized values of these cognitive domains occurred only in females (β = 0.735; 95% confidence interval, 0.396-1.074; p = 3.167·10-5 and β = 0.568; 95% confidence interval, 0.276-0.861; p = 1.853·10-4, respectively). Similarly, the sex-specific effects of APOE ε2 were further observed on lipidic and inflammation biomarkers. In the whole sample, APOE ε2 carriers showed significantly lower levels of total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and C-reactive protein. These differences were found only among females. Furthermore, total cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol mediated the protective effect of APOE ε2 on cognition in the whole sample and total cholesterol in females, providing candidate physiological mechanisms for the observed genetic effects. Our results show that the neuroprotective role of APOE ε2 in cognition varies with sex and that the lipidic profile partially mediates this protection. Age-related cognitive and functional decline is a continuous biological process with different cognitive trajectories (1). Complex interactions between heritability, environmental influence, and cognitive functions in aging have been highlighted (2). In particular, genetic differences explain around 15%-25% of the variance in life expectancy (3). Therefore, the identification of susceptibility genes and their biological effects on cognitive aging is required to establish interindividual differences in this process and promote early personalized interventions to delay cognitive decline and minimize the financial burden of aging in the health care system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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24. 'Big Data' en genòmica: reptes i riscos ètics
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Via, Marc
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Big Data ,compartición de datos ,privadesa ,privacidad ,bioètica ,data sharing ,troballes incidentals ,genética ,privacy ,genómica ,incidental findings ,compartició de dades ,genomics ,genetics ,bioética ,hallazgos incidentales ,bioethics - Abstract
Genomic information is a class of Big Data in expanding use thanks to technological developments. Here, we review three categories of ethical risks and challenges associated with genomic information: privacy issues, the management of incidental findings, and challenges in data storage and sharing. First, we need to implement strong mechanisms to protect privacy, but genomic data faces specific risks and we need to acknowledge the possibility of re-identification. Proper usage of genomic information has to be regulated, including recommendations on incidental finding management. Also, clear policies for data sharing and explicit efforts to promote central repositories of genomic data should be established. However, technology and new applications of genetic information will develop fast and we should anticipate potential new risks. Resumen La información genómica es un tipo de 'Big Data' de uso creciente debido a mejoras tecnológicas. En este trabajo, revisamos tres grupos de retos y riesgos éticos asociados con esta información: riesgos de privacidad, gestión de los hallazgos incidentales y retos en el almacenamiento y compartición de datos. En primer lugar, debemos establecer mecanismos sólidos para proteger la privacidad, pero los datos genómicos presentan riesgos específicos y debemos admitir la posibilidad de reidentificación. Hay que regular el uso adecuado de la información genómica incluyendo recomendaciones para la gestión de los hallazgos incidentales. También hay que establecer políticas claras para compartir datos y fomentar el uso de repositorios de datos genómicos. No obstante, debemos esperar desarrollos rápidos en la tecnología y nuevas aplicaciones de la información genética, y debemos anticiparnos a los futuros riesgos potenciales. Resum La informació genòmica és un tipus de 'Big Data' d'ús creixent a causa de millores tecnològiques. En aquest treball, revisem tres grups de reptes i riscos ètics associats amb aquesta informació: riscos de privadesa, gestió de les troballes incidentals i reptes en l'emmagatzematge i compartició de dades. En primer lloc, hem d'establir mecanismes sòlids per protegir la privadesa, però les dades genòmiques presenten riscos específics i hem d'admetre la possibilitat de reidentificació. Cal regular l'ús adequat de la informació genòmica incloent-hi recomanacions per a la gestió de les troballes incidentals. També cal establir polítiques clares per compartir dades i fomentar l'ús de repositoris de dades genòmiques. No obstant això, hem d'esperar desenvolupaments ràpids a la tecnologia i noves aplicacions de la informació genètica, i hem d'anticipar-nos als riscos potencials futurs.
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- 2017
25. Effects and Mechanisms of Cognitive, Aerobic Exercise, and Combined Training on Cognition, Health, and Brain Outcomes in Physically Inactive Older Adults: The Projecte Moviment Protocol.
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Castells-Sánchez, Alba, Roig-Coll, Francesca, Lamonja-Vicente, Noemí, Altés-Magret, Marina, Torán-Monserrat, Pere, Via, Marc, García-Molina, Alberto, Tormos, José Maria, Heras, Antonio, Alzamora, Maite T., Forés, Rosa, Pera, Guillem, Dacosta-Aguayo, Rosalia, Soriano-Raya, Juan José, Cáceres, Cynthia, Montero-Alía, Pilar, Montero-Alía, Juan José, Jimenez-Gonzalez, Maria Mercedes, Hernández-Pérez, Maria, and Perera, Alexandre
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AEROBIC exercises ,OLDER people ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,CLINICAL trial registries ,COGNITIVE training ,INTERVAL training - Abstract
Introduction: Age-related health, brain, and cognitive impairment is a great challenge in current society. Cognitive training, aerobic exercise and their combination have been shown to benefit health, brain, cognition and psychological status in healthy older adults. Inconsistent results across studies may be related to several variables. We need to better identify cognitive changes, individual variables that may predict the effect of these interventions, and changes in structural and functional brain outcomes as well as physiological molecular correlates that may be mediating these effects. Projecte Moviment is a multi-domain randomized trial examining the effect of these interventions applied 5 days per week for 3 months compared to a passive control group. The aim of this paper is to describe the sample, procedures and planned analyses. Methods: One hundred and forty healthy physically inactive older adults will be randomly assigned to computerized cognitive training (CCT), aerobic exercise (AE), combined training (COMB), or a control group. The intervention consists of a 3 month home-based program 5 days per week in sessions of 45 min. Data from cognitive, physical, and psychological tests, cardiovascular risk factors, structural and functional brain scans, and blood samples will be obtained before and after the intervention. Results: Effects of the interventions on cognitive outcomes will be described in intention-to-treat and per protocol analyses. We will also analyze potential genetic, demographic, brain, and physiological molecular correlates that may predict the effects of intervention, as well as the association between cognitive effects and changes in these variables using the per protocol sample. Discussion: Projecte Moviment is a multi-domain intervention trial based on prior evidence that aims to understand the effects of CCT, AE, and COMB on cognitive and psychological outcomes compared to a passive control group, and to determine related biological correlates and predictors of the intervention effects. Clinical Trial Registration: www.ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier NCT03123900. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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26. Reconstructing Native American Migrations from Whole-Genome and Whole-Exome Data
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Gravel, Simon, Zakharia, Fouad, Moreno Estrada, Andrés, Byrnes, Jake K., Muzzio, Marina, Rodriguez Flores, Juan L., Kenny, Eimear E., Gignoux, Christopher R., Maples, Brian K., Guiblet, Wilfried, Dutil, Julie, Via, Marc, Sandoval, Karla, Bedoya, Gabriel, Oleksyk, Taras K., Ruiz Linares, Andrés, Burchard, Esteban G., Martinez Cruzado, Juan Carlos, Bustamante, Carlos D., The 1000 Genomes Project, and Universitat de Barcelona
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Cancer Research ,Population genetics ,Amèrica ,Genoma humà ,92D25 ,purl.org/becyt/ford/1 [https] ,Effective population size ,Gene Frequency ,Models ,Human Genome Project ,Mexican Americans ,Sequencing ,Exome ,Aborígens ,Genetics (clinical) ,Native American Migrations ,Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,education.field_of_study ,Human migration ,Population size ,030305 genetics & heredity ,Chromosome Mapping ,Hispanic or Latino ,Bioquímica y Biología Molecular ,Full Genomes ,CIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTAS ,Research Article ,lcsh:QH426-470 ,Human Migration ,Population ,Black People ,America ,Biology ,White People ,Ciencias Biológicas ,03 medical and health sciences ,Pobles indígenes ,Migració de pobles ,Humans ,Ciencias Naturales ,Quantitative Biology - Genomics ,1000 Genomes Project ,purl.org/becyt/ford/1.6 [https] ,education ,Quantitative Biology - Populations and Evolution ,Molecular Biology ,Genotyping ,Allele frequency ,Mexico ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology ,Genomics (q-bio.GN) ,Human genome ,business.industry ,Genome, Human ,Puerto Rico ,Racial Groups ,Native American ,Populations and Evolution (q-bio.PE) ,15. Life on land ,Migrations of nations ,lcsh:Genetics ,Genetics, Population ,Evolutionary biology ,FOS: Biological sciences ,Indians, North American ,Indigenous peoples ,business - Abstract
There is great scientific and popular interest in understanding the genetic history of populations in the Americas. We wish to understand when different regions of the continent were inhabited, where settlers came from, and how current inhabitants relate genetically to earlier populations. Recent studies unraveled parts of the genetic history of the continent using genotyping arrays and uniparental markers. The 1000 Genomes Project provides a unique opportunity for improving our understanding of population genetic history by providing over a hundred sequenced low coverage genomes and exomes from Colombian (CLM), Mexican-American (MXL), and Puerto Rican (PUR) populations. Here, we explore the genomic contributions of African, European, and especially Native American ancestry to these populations. Estimated Native American ancestry is 48% in MXL, 25% in CLM, and 13% in PUR. Native American ancestry in PUR is most closely related to populations surrounding the Orinoco River basin, confirming the Southern America ancestry of the Taíno people of the Caribbean. We present new methods to estimate the allele frequencies in the Native American fraction of the populations, and model their distribution using a demographic model for three ancestral Native American populations. These ancestral populations likely split in close succession: the most likely scenario, based on a peopling of the Americas 16 thousand years ago (kya), supports that the MXL Ancestors split 12.2kya, with a subsequent split of the ancestors to CLM and PUR 11.7kya. The model also features effective populations of 62,000 in Mexico, 8,700 in Colombia, and 1,900 in Puerto Rico. Modeling Identity-by-descent (IBD) and ancestry tract length, we show that post-contact populations also differ markedly in their effective sizes and migration patterns, with Puerto Rico showing the smallest effective size and the earlier migration from Europe. Finally, we compare IBD and ancestry assignments to find evidence for relatedness among European founders to the three populations., Facultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo, Instituto Multidisciplinario de Biología Celular
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- 2013
27. Cosmopolitan and Ethnic-specific Replication of Genetic Risk Factors for Asthma in Two Latino Populations
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Galanter, Joshua M, Torgerson, Dara, Gignoux, Chris R, Sen, Saunak, Roth, Lindsey A., Via, Marc, Aldrich, Melinda C, Eng, Celeste, Huntsman, Scott, Rodriguez-Santana, Jose, Rodriguez-Cintrón, William, Chapela, Rocio, Ford, Jean G., and Burchard, Esteban G.
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Puerto Rico ,Hispanic or Latino ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Article ,Asthma ,Young Adult ,Risk Factors ,Mexican Americans ,Humans ,Female ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Child ,Mexico ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis - Abstract
Although Mexicans and Puerto Ricans are jointly classified as "Hispanic/Latino," there are significant differences in asthma prevalence, severity, and mortality between the 2 groups. We sought to examine the possibility that population-specific genetic risks contribute to this disparity.More than 100 candidate genes have been associated with asthma and replicated in an independent population, and 7 genome-wide association studies in asthma have been performed. We compared the pattern of replication of these associations in Puerto Ricans and Mexicans.We genotyped Mexican and Puerto Rican trios using an Affymetrix 6.0 GeneChip and used a family-based analysis to test for genetic associations in 124 genes previously associated with asthma.We identified 32 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 17 genes associated with asthma in at least 1 of the 2 populations. Twenty-two of these SNPs in 11 genes were significantly associated with asthma in the combined population and showed no significant heterogeneity of association, whereas 5 SNPs were associated in only 1 population and showed statistically significant heterogeneity. In a gene-based approach 2 additional genes were associated with asthma in the combined population, and 3 additional genes displayed ethnic-specific associations with heterogeneity.Our results show that only a minority of genetic association studies replicate in our population of Mexican and Puerto Rican asthmatic subjects. Among SNPs that were successfully replicated, most showed no significant heterogeneity across populations. However, we identified several population-specific genetic associations.
- Published
- 2011
28. Population Relationships in the Mediterranean Revealed by Autosomal Genetic Data (Alu and Alu/STR Compound Systems)
- Author
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Gonzalez-Perez, Emili Esteban, Esther Via, Marc Gaya-Vidal, Magdalena Athanasiadis, Georgios Dugoujon, Jean Michel Luna, Francisco Soledad Mesa, Maria Fuster, Vicente Kandil, Mostafa Harich, Nourdin Bissar-Tadmouri, Nisrine Saetta, Angela Moral, Pedro
- Subjects
humanities - Abstract
The variation of 18 Alu polymorphisms and 3 linked STRs was determined in 1,831 individuals from 15 Mediterranean populations to analyze the relationships between human groups in this geographical region and provide a complementary perspective to information from studies based on uniparental markers. Patterns of population diversity revealed by the two kinds of markers examined were different from one another, likely in relation to their different mutation rates. Therefore, while the Alu biallelic variation underlies general heterogeneity throughout the whole Mediterranean region, the combined use of Alu and STR points to a considerable genetic differentiation between the two Mediterranean shores, presumably strengthened by a considerable sub-Saharan African genetic contribution in North Africa (around 13% calculated from Alu markers). Gene flow analysis confirms the permeability of the Sahara to human passage along with the existence of trans-Mediterranean interchanges. Two specific Alu/STR combinations-CD4 110(-) and DM 107(-)-detected in all North African samples, the Iberian Peninsula, Greece, Turkey, and some Mediterranean islands suggest an ancient genetic background of current Mediterranean peoples. Am J Phys Anthropol 141:430-439, 2010. (C) 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
- Published
- 2010
29. Genetic Ancestry and Susceptibility to Late-Onset Alzheimer Disease (LOAD) in the Admixed Colombian Population.
- Author
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Moreno, Diana J., Pino, Sebastián, Ríos, Ángela, Lopera, Francisco, Ostos, Henry, Via, Marc, and Bedoya, Gabriel
- Abstract
Introduction: Differences in the prevalence of dementia among populations and in the effect of apolipoprotein E (APOE) on the emergence of Alzheimer disease (AD), which is the main type of dementia, have been reported.Methods: This study estimated the ancestry of a group of individuals with late-onset Alzheimer disease (LOAD) (N=280) and established whether there were any differences when compared with a control group (N=357) in a sample of the Colombian population.Results: When the analyses were adjusted for known risk factors such as age, sex, presence of APOE[Latin Small Letter Open E]4, socioeconomic status, educational attainment, and place of birth, African ancestry was associated with an increased LOAD risk (odds ratio: 1.55; 95% confidence interval, 1.09-2.03; P=0.029), whereas Native American ancestry was associated with lower risk (odds ratio: 0.75; 95% confidence interval, 0.61-0.98; P=0.046), for every 10% increase in ancestry. In addition, there were significant differences in the proportion of Native American ancestry between carriers and noncarriers of the APOE[Latin Small Letter Open E]4 allele (Mann-Whitney U test, P=0.047), with noncarriers having higher mean Native American ancestry when compared with carriers.Conclusions: Our results are consistent with the presence of variants of African origin in the genome of the Colombian population and different from APOE[Latin Small Letter Open E]4 that represents a risk factor for the development of LOAD, whereas variants of Native American origin may be conferring protection. However, unknown environmental factors or epigenetic differences among continental groups could also explain the observed associations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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30. COMT and DRD2/ANKK-1 gene-gene interaction account for resetting of gamma neural oscillations to auditory stimulus-driven attention.
- Author
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Garcia-Garcia, Manuel, Via, Marc, Zarnowiec, Katarzyna, SanMiguel, Iria, Escera, Carles, and Clemente, Immaculada C.
- Subjects
- *
AUDITORY cortex physiology , *MOLECULAR interactions , *COGNITIVE ability , *ACTION theory (Psychology) , *STIMULUS & response (Psychology) , *SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms , *PREFRONTAL cortex - Abstract
Attention capture by potentially relevant environmental stimuli is critical for human survival, yet it varies considerably among individuals. A large series of studies has suggested that attention capture may depend on the cognitive balance between maintenance and manipulation of mental representations and the flexible switch between goal-directed representations and potentially relevant stimuli outside the focus of attention; a balance that seems modulated by a prefrontostriatal dopamine pathway. Here, we examined inter-individual differences in the cognitive control of attention through studying the effects of two single nucleotide polymorphisms regulating dopamine at the prefrontal cortex and the striatum (i.e., COMTMet108/158Val and ANKK1/DRD2TaqIA) on stimulus-driven attention capture. Healthy adult participants (N = 40) were assigned to different groups according to the combination of the polymorphisms COMTMet108/158Val and ANKK1/DRD2TaqIA, and were instructed to perform on a well-established distraction protocol. Performance in individuals with a balance between prefrontal dopamine display and striatal receptor density was slowed down by the occurrence of unexpected distracting events, while those with a rather unbalanced dopamine activity were able maintain task performance with no time delay, yet at the expense of a slightly lower accuracy. This advantage, associated to their distinct genetic profiles, was paralleled by an electrophysiological mechanism of phase-resetting of gamma neural oscillation to the novel, distracting events. Taken together, the current results suggest that the epistatic interaction between COMTVal108/158Met and ANKK1/DRD2 TaqIa genetic polymorphisms lies at the basis of stimulus-driven attention capture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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31. Population structure from NOS genes correlates with geographical differences in coronary incidence across Europe.
- Author
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Carreras‐Torres, Robert, Ferran, Albert, Zanetti, Daniela, Esteban, Esther, Varesi, Laurent, Pojskic, Naris, Coia, Valentina, Chaabani, Hassen, Via, Marc, and Moral, Pedro
- Subjects
CARDIOVASCULAR diseases risk factors ,HUMAN genetic variation ,SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms ,NITRIC-oxide synthases ,HUMAN population genetics - Abstract
Objectives The population analysis of cardiovascular risk and non-risk genetic variation can help to identify adaptive or random demographic processes that shaped coronary incidence variation across geography. Material and Methods In this study, 114 single nucleotide polymorphisms and 17 tandem repeat polymorphisms from Nitric Oxide Synthases ( NOS) regions were analyzed in 1686 individuals from 35 populations from Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East. NOS genes encode for key enzymes on nitric oxide availability, which is involved in several cardiovascular processes. These genetic variations were used to test for selection and to infer the population structure of NOS regions. Moreover, we tested whether the variation in the incidence of coronary events and in the levels of classical risk factors in 11 of these European populations could be explained by the population structure estimates. Results Our results supported, first, the absence of clear signs of selection for NOS genetic variants associated with cardiovascular diseases, and second, the presence of a continuous genetic pattern of variation across European and North African populations without a Mediterranean barrier for gene flow. Finally, population structure estimates from NOS regions are closely correlated with coronary event rates and classical risk parameters (explaining 39-98%) among European populations. Conclusion Our results reinforce the hypothesis that genetic bases of cardiovascular diseases and associated complex phenotypes could be geographically shaped by random demographic processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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32. Allele-allele interaction within the F13A1 gene: A risk factor for Ischaemic Heart Disease in Spanish population
- Author
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Carreras-Torres, Robert, Athanasiadis, Georgios, Via, Marc, Trenchs, Joan, Gayà-Vidal, Magdalena, Santamaria, Josep, Esteban, Esther, and Moral, Pedro
- Published
- 2010
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33. Involvement of the Serotonin Transporter Gene in Accurate Subcortical Speech Encoding.
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Selinger, Lenka, Zarnowiec, Katarzyna, Via, Marc, Clemente, Immaculada C., and Escera, Carles
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SEROTONIN transporters ,AUDITORY pathways ,PHONOLOGICAL encoding ,BIOMARKERS ,EVOKED potentials (Electrophysiology) ,SIGNAL-to-noise ratio - Abstract
A flourishing line of evidence has highlighted the encoding of speech sounds in the subcortical auditory system as being shaped by acoustic, linguistic, and musical experience and training. And while the heritability of auditory speech as well as nonspeech processing has been suggested, the genetic determinants of subcortical speech processing have not yet been uncovered. Here, we postulated that the serotonin transporter-linked polymorphic region (5-HTTLPR), a common functional polymorphism located in the promoter region of the serotonin transporter gene (SLC6A4), is implicated in speech encoding in the human subcortical auditory pathway. Serotonin has been shown as essential for modulating the brain response to sound both cortically and subcortically, yet the genetic factors regulating this modulation regarding speech sounds have not been disclosed. We recorded the frequency following response, a biomarker of the neural tracking of speech sounds in the subcortical auditory pathway, and cortical evoked potentials in 58 participants elicited to the syllable /ba/, which was presented >2000 times. Participants with low serotonin transporter expression had higher signal-to-noise ratios as well as a higher pitch strength representation of the periodic part of the syllable than participants with medium to high expression, possibly by tuning synaptic activity to the stimulus features and hence a more efficient suppression of noise. These results imply the 5-HTTLPR in subcortical auditory speech encoding and add an important, genetically determined layer to the factors shaping the human subcortical response to speech sounds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
34. Analysis of Genomic Regions Associated With Coronary Artery Disease Reveals Continent-Specific Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms in North African Populations.
- Author
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Zanetti, Daniela, Via, Marc, Carreras-Torres, Robert, Esteban, Esther, Chaabani, Hassen, Anaibar, Fatima, Harich, Nourdin, Habbal, Rachida, Ghalim, Noreddine, and Moral, Pedro
- Published
- 2016
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35. Potential Signals of Natural Selection in the Top Risk Loci for Coronary Artery Disease: 9p21 and 10q11.
- Author
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Zanetti, Daniela, Carreras-Torres, Robert, Esteban, Esther, Via, Marc, and Moral, Pedro
- Subjects
NATURAL selection ,CORONARY heart disease risk factors ,BIOMARKERS ,CORONARY disease ,LOCUS (Genetics) - Abstract
Background: Coronary artery disease (CAD) is a complex disease and the leading cause of death in the world. Populations of different ancestry do not always share the same risk markers. Natural selective processes may be the cause of some of the population differences detected for specific risk mutations. Objective: In this study, 384 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) located in four genomic regions associated with CAD (1p13, 1q41, 9p21 and 10q11) are analysed in a set of 19 populations from Europe, Middle East and North Africa and also in Asian and African samples from the 1000 Genomes Project. The aim of this survey is to explore for the first time whether the genetic variability in these genomic regions is better explained by demography or by natural selection. Results: The results indicate significant differences in the structure of genetic variation and in the LD patterns among populations that probably explain the population disparities found in markers of susceptibility to CAD. Conclusions: The results are consistent with potential signature of positive selection in the 9p21 region and of balancing selection in the 9p21 and 10q11. Specifically, in Europe three CAD risk markers in the 9p21 region (rs9632884, rs1537371 and rs1333042) show consistent signals of positive selection. The results of this study are consistent with a potential selective role of CAD in the configuration of genetic diversity in current human populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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36. Genetic Risk Score of NOS Gene Variants Associated with Myocardial Infarction Correlates with Coronary Incidence across Europe.
- Author
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Carreras-Torres, Robert, Kundu, Suman, Zanetti, Daniela, Esteban, Esther, Via, Marc, and Moral, Pedro
- Subjects
GENETIC polymorphisms ,MYOCARDIAL infarction ,CORONARY disease ,MORTALITY ,SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms ,NITRIC-oxide synthases ,GENETICS - Abstract
Coronary artery disease (CAD) mortality and morbidity is present in the European continent in a four-fold gradient across populations, from the South (Spain and France) with the lowest CAD mortality, towards the North (Finland and UK). This observed gradient has not been fully explained by classical or single genetic risk factors, resulting in some cases in the so called Southern European or Mediterranean paradox. Here we approached population genetic risk estimates using genetic risk scores (GRS) constructed with single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) from nitric oxide synthases (NOS) genes. These SNPs appeared to be associated with myocardial infarction (MI) in 2165 cases and 2153 controls. The GRSs were computed in 34 general European populations. Although the contribution of these GRS was lower than 1% between cases and controls, the mean GRS per population was positively correlated with coronary incidence explaining 65–85% of the variation among populations (67% in women and 86% in men). This large contribution to CAD incidence variation among populations might be a result of colinearity with several other common genetic and environmental factors. These results are not consistent with the cardiovascular Mediterranean paradox for genetics and support a CAD genetic architecture mainly based on combinations of common genetic polymorphisms. Population genetic risk scores is a promising approach in public health interventions to develop lifestyle programs and prevent intermediate risk factors in certain subpopulations with specific genetic predisposition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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37. Usefulness of autosomal STR polymorphisms beyond forensic purposes: data on Arabic- and Berber-speaking populations from central Morocco.
- Author
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Gaibar, Maria, Esteban, María Esther, Via, Marc, Harich, Nourdin, Kandil, Mostafa, and Fernández-Santander, Ana
- Subjects
MICROSATELLITE repeats ,LOCUS (Genetics) ,LINGUISTICS ,ALLELES ,HETEROZYGOSITY ,MOROCCANS - Abstract
Background:This work describes, for the first time, the profile of Middle Atlas Berbers and Arabic-speaking central Moroccans for 15 autosomal STR loci widely used in forensic sciences. Aim: The main objectives were to determine the degree of heterogeneity among different Moroccan samples to identify geographic or linguistic patterns and to evaluate the usefulness of forensic STRs in anthropological studies. Subjects and methods: Blood samples were collected from 71 Arabic-speakers and 75 Berbers from the regions of Doukkala (central-west coast) and Khenifra (Middle Atlas), respectively. The AmpFlSTR Identifier kit was used to genotype 15 autosomal STR in both samples. Results: Middle Atlas Berbers showed slightly higher genetic variation values compared to Arabic-speakers, both in the number of alleles and heterozygosity. In order to assess population relationships, data from Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Kuwait, Qatar, Palestine, Syria, South-Spain and Turkey were included in the analysis. Within Morocco, genetic distances followed a clear geographic pattern. In the Arabic-speaking sample the genetic proportion of 'Arabian' admixture was estimated in 13%. Conclusion: The low value of admixture suggests that the Arabization of Morocco had a reduced demographic impact, which should be taken with caution because it is based on autosomal STRs with low inter-population variation levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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38. Heterogeneity in Genetic Admixture across Different Regions of Argentina.
- Author
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Avena, Sergio, Via, Marc, Ziv, Elad, Pérez-Stable, Eliseo J., Gignoux, Christopher R., Dejean, Cristina, Huntsman, Scott, Torres-Mejía, Gabriela, Dutil, Julie, Matta, Jaime L., Beckman, Kenneth, Burchard, Esteban González, Parolin, María Laura, Goicoechea, Alicia, Acreche, Noemí, Boquet, Mariel, Ríos Part, María Del Carmen, Ferníndez, Vanesa, Rey, Jorge, and Stern, Mariana C.
- Subjects
- *
GENEALOGY , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *GRANDPARENTS - Abstract
The population of Argentina is the result of the intermixing between several groups, including Indigenous American, European and African populations. Despite the commonly held idea that the population of Argentina is of mostly European origin, multiple studies have shown that this process of admixture had an impact in the entire Argentine population. In the present study we characterized the distribution of Indigenous American, European and African ancestry among individuals from different regions of Argentina and evaluated the level of discrepancy between self-reported grandparental origin and genetic ancestry estimates. A set of 99 autosomal ancestry informative markers (AIMs) was genotyped in a sample of 441 Argentine individuals to estimate genetic ancestry. We used non-parametric tests to evaluate statistical significance. The average ancestry for the Argentine sample overall was 65% European (95%CI: 63-68%), 31% Indigenous American (28-33%) and 4% African (3-4%). We observed statistically significant differences in European ancestry across Argentine regions [Buenos Aires province (BA) 76%, 95%CI: 73-79%; Northeast (NEA) 54%, 95%CI: 49-58%; Northwest (NWA) 33%, 95%CI: 21- 41%; South 54%, 95%CI: 49-59%; p<0.0001] as well as between the capital and immediate suburbs of Buenos Aires city compared to more distant suburbs [80% (95%CI: 75-86%) versus 68% (95%CI: 58-77%), p = 0.01]. European ancestry among individuals that declared all grandparents born in Europe was 91% (95%CI: 88-94%) compared to 54% (95%CI: 51-57%) among those with no European grandparents (p<0.001). Our results demonstrate the range of variation in genetic ancestry among Argentine individuals from different regions in the country, highlighting the importance of taking this variation into account in genetic association and admixture mapping studies in this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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39. Development of a Panel of Genome-Wide Ancestry Informative Markers to Study Admixture Throughout the Americas.
- Author
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Galanter, Joshua Mark, Fernandez-Lopez, Juan Carlos, Gignoux, Christopher R., Barnholtz-Sloan, Jill, Fernandez-Rozadilla, Ceres, Via, Marc, Hidalgo-Miranda, Alfredo, Contreras, Alejandra V., Figueroa, Laura Uribe, Raska, Paola, Jimenez-Sanchez, Gerardo, Zolezzi, Irma Silva, Torres, Maria, Ponte, Clara Ruiz, Ruiz, Yarimar, Salas, Antonio, Nguyen, Elizabeth, Eng, Celeste, Borjas, Lisbeth, and Zabala, William
- Subjects
GENOMES ,GENOMICS ,GENETICS ,GENOTYPE-environment interaction ,ETHNIC groups - Abstract
Most individuals throughout the Americas are admixed descendants of Native American, European, and African ancestors. Complex historical factors have resulted in varying proportions of ancestral contributions between individuals within and among ethnic groups. We developed a panel of 446 ancestry informative markers (AIMs) optimized to estimate ancestral proportions in individuals and populations throughout Latin America. We used genome-wide data from 953 individuals from diverse African, European, and Native American populations to select AIMs optimized for each of the three main continental populations that form the basis of modern Latin American populations. We selected markers on the basis of locus-specific branch length to be informative, well distributed throughout the genome, capable of being genotyped on widely available commercial platforms, and applicable throughout the Americas by minimizing within-continent heterogeneity. We then validated the panel in samples from four admixed populations by comparing ancestry estimates based on the AIMs panel to estimates based on genome-wide association study (GWAS) data. The panel provided balanced discriminatory power among the three ancestral populations and accurate estimates of individual ancestry proportions (R² > 0.9 for ancestral components with significant between-subject variance). Finally, we genotyped samples from 18 populations from Latin America using the AIMs panel and estimated variability in ancestry within and between these populations. This panel and its reference genotype information will be useful resources to explore population history of admixture in Latin America and to correct for the potential effects of population stratification in admixed samples in the region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. History Shaped the Geographic Distribution of Genomic Admixture on the Island of Puerto Rico.
- Author
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Via, Marc, Gignoux, Christopher R., Roth, Lindsey A., Fejerman, Laura, Galanter, Joshua, Choudhry, Shweta, Toro-Labrador, Gladys, Viera-Vera, Jorge, Oleksyk, Taras K., Beckman, Kenneth, Ziv, Elad, Risch, Neil, Burchard, Esteban González, and Martínez-Cruzado, Juan Carlos
- Subjects
- *
GENEALOGY , *GENOMICS , *MOLECULAR genetics , *HUMAN genetic variation , *LATIN Americans , *POPULATION , *DEMOGRAPHIC surveys , *SUGAR plantations - Abstract
Contemporary genetic variation among Latin Americans human groups reflects population migrations shaped by complex historical, social and economic factors. Consequently, admixture patterns may vary by geographic regions ranging from countries to neighborhoods. We examined the geographic variation of admixture across the island of Puerto Rico and the degree to which it could be explained by historic and social events. We analyzed a census-based sample of 642 Puerto Rican individuals that were genotyped for 93 ancestry informative markers (AIMs) to estimate African, European and Native American ancestry. Socioeconomic status (SES) data and geographic location were obtained for each individual. There was significant geographic variation of ancestry across the island. In particular, African ancestry demonstrated a decreasing East to West gradient that was partially explained by historical factors linked to the colonial sugar plantation system. SES also demonstrated a parallel decreasing cline from East to West. However, at a local level, SES and African ancestry were negatively correlated. European ancestry was strongly negatively correlated with African ancestry and therefore showed patterns complementary to African ancestry. By contrast, Native American ancestry showed little variation across the island and across individuals and appears to have played little social role historically. The observed geographic distributions of SES and genetic variation relate to historical social events and mating patterns, and have substantial implications for the design of studies in the recently admixed Puerto Rican population. More generally, our results demonstrate the importance of incorporating social and geographic data with genetics when studying contemporary admixed populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The X chromosome Alu insertions as a tool for human population genetics: data from European and African human groups.
- Author
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Athanasiadis, Georgios, Esteban, Esther, Via, Marc, Dugoujon, Jean-Michel, Moschonas, Nicholas, Chaabani, Hassen, and Moral, Pedro
- Subjects
HUMAN genome ,X chromosome ,HUMAN chromosomes ,GENETIC markers ,POPULATION - Abstract
Alu elements are the most abundant mobile elements in the human genome (∼1 100 000 copies). Polymorphic Alu elements have been proved to be useful in studies of human origins and relationships owing to two important advantages: identity by descent and absence of the Alu element known to be the ancestral state. Alu variation in the X chromosome has been described previously in human populations but, as far as we know, these elements have not been used in population relationship studies. Here, we describe the allele frequencies of 13 ‘young’ Alu elements of the X chromosome (Ya5DP62, Ya5DP57, Yb8DP49, Ya5a2DP1, Yb8DP2, Ya5DP3, Ya5NBC37, Yd3JX437, Ya5DP77, Ya5NBC491, Yb8NBC578, Ya5DP4 and Ya5DP13) in six human populations from sub-Saharan Africa (the Ivory Coast), North Africa (Moroccan High Atlas, Siwa oasis in Egypt, Tunisia), Greece (Crete Island) and Spain (Basque Country). Eight out of 13 Alu elements have shown remarkably high gene diversity values in all groups (average heterozygosities: 0.342 in the Ivory Coast, 0.250 in North Africa, 0.209 in Europe). Genetic relationships agree with a geographical pattern of differentiation among populations, with some peculiar features observed in North Africans. Crete Island and the Basque Country show the lowest genetic distance (0.0163) meanwhile Tunisia, in spite of its geographical location, lies far from the other two North African samples. The results of our work demonstrate that X chromosome Alu elements comprise a reliable set of genetic markers useful to describe human population relationships for fine-scale geographical studies.European Journal of Human Genetics (2007) 15, 578–583. doi:10.1038/sj.ejhg.5201797; published online 28 February 2007 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Molecular Variation at Functional Genes and the History of Human Populations - Data on Candidate Genes for Cardiovascular Risk in the Mediterranean.
- Author
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Moral, Pedro, Valveny, Neus, López-Alomar, Antonio, Calo, Carla, Kandil, Mostafa, Harich, Nordin, González-Pérez, Emili, Via, Marc, Esteban, Esther, Dugoujon, Jean Michel, and Vona, Giuseppe
- Subjects
GENETIC polymorphisms ,GENETIC markers ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases ,APOLIPOPROTEINS ,TISSUE plasminogen activator ,PLASMINOGEN activators - Abstract
Copyright of Collegium Antropologicum is the property of Croatian Anthropological Society and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2003
43. Alu Insertions in the Iberian Peninsula and North West Africa - Genetic Boundaries or Melting Pot?
- Author
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González-Pérez, Emili, Via, Marc, Esteban, Esther, López-Alomar, Antoni, Mazieres, Stéphane, Harich, Nourdin, Kandil, Mostafa, Dugoujon, Jean-Michel, and Moral, Pedro
- Subjects
ETHNIC groups ,GENETIC markers ,HUMAN population genetics - Abstract
Copyright of Collegium Antropologicum is the property of Croatian Anthropological Society and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2003
44. Molecular Variation in Endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase Gene (eNOS) in Western Mediterranean Populations.
- Author
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Via, Marc, González-Pérez, Emili, Esteban, Esther, López-Alomar, Antonio, Vacca, Lucia, Vona, Giuseppe, Dugoujon, Jean Michel, Harich, Nourdin, and Moral, Pedro
- Subjects
NITRIC oxide ,CARDIOVASCULAR system ,GENETIC polymorphisms - Abstract
Copyright of Collegium Antropologicum is the property of Croatian Anthropological Society and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2003
45. A Large Family with p.Arg554His Mutation in ABCD1 : Clinical Features and Genotype/Phenotype Correlation in Female Carriers.
- Author
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Campopiano, Rosa, Femiano, Cinzia, Chiaravalloti, Maria Antonietta, Ferese, Rosangela, Centonze, Diego, Buttari, Fabio, Zampatti, Stefania, Fanelli, Mirco, Amatori, Stefano, D'Alessio, Carmelo, Giardina, Emiliano, Fornai, Francesco, Biagioni, Francesca, Storto, Marianna, Gambardella, Stefano, and Via, Marc
- Subjects
PHENOTYPES ,ADRENOLEUKODYSTROPHY ,PEROXISOMAL disorders ,ADENOSINE triphosphate ,GENOTYPES - Abstract
X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD, OMIM #300100) is the most common peroxisomal disorder clinically characterized by two main phenotypes: adrenomyeloneuropathy (AMN) and the cerebral demyelinating form of X-ALD (cerebral ALD). The disease is caused by defects in the gene for the adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-binding cassette protein, subfamily D (ABCD1) that encodes the peroxisomal transporter of very-long-chain fatty acids (VLCFAs). The defective function of ABCD1 protein prevents β-oxidation of VLCFAs, which thus accumulate in tissues and plasma, to represent the hallmark of the disease. As in many X-linked diseases, it has been routinely expected that female carriers are asymptomatic. Nonetheless, recent findings indicate that most ABCD1 female carriers become symptomatic, with a motor disability that typically appears between the fourth and fifth decade. In this paper, we report a large family in which affected males died during the first decade, while affected females develop, during the fourth decade, progressive lower limb weakness with spastic or ataxic-spastic gait, tetra-hyperreflexia with sensory alterations. Clinical and genetic evaluations were performed in nine subjects, eight females (five affected and three healthy) and one healthy male. All affected females were carriers of the c.1661G>A (p.Arg554His, rs201568579) mutation. This study strengthens the relevance of clinical symptoms in female carriers of ABCD1 mutations, which leads to a better understanding of the role of the genetic background and the genotype-phenotype correlation. This indicates the relevance to include ABCD1 genes in genetic panels for gait disturbance in women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Successful Immunization Against Acanthamoeba Keratitis in a Pig Model.
- Author
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Alizadeh, Hassan, He, YuGuang, McCulley, James P., Ma, Ding, Stewart, George L., Via, Marc, Haehling, Eva, and Niederkorn, Jerry Y.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Human Diversity in Jordan: Polymorphic Alu Insertions in General Jordanian and Bedouin Groups
- Author
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Zanetti, Daniela, Sadiq, May, Carreras-Torres, Robert, Khabour, Omar, Alkaraki, Almuthanna, Esteban, Esther, Via, Marc, and Moral, Pedro
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Poorer cognitive performance in humans with mild cognitive impairment carrying the T variant of the Glu/Asp NOS3 polymorphism
- Author
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Solé-Padullés, Cristina, Bartrés-Faz, David, Junqué, Carme, Via, Marc, Matarín, Mar, González-Pérez, Emili, Moral, Pedro, Moya, Antoni, and Clemente, Immaculada C.
- Subjects
- *
DISABILITIES , *MEMORY , *FRONTAL lobe , *ALZHEIMER'S disease - Abstract
Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a transitional state between normal aging and Alzheimer''s disease (AD) and is a high-risk condition for dementia. The endothelial nitric oxide synthase (NOS3) gene encodes endothelial NOS, an enzyme that regulates the production of the vasodilatory nitric oxide associated with the cerebral small vessel pathology observed in early AD. We studied the distribution of genotype and allele frequencies of the NOS3 Glu/Asp polymorphism in a sample of 62 MCI subjects and 136 controls. Though no association between NOS3 gene variation and MCI status was observed, MCI cases carrying the Asp variant (T+) performed worse in the Mini-Mental State Examination, Wechsler Memory Scale (Revised) long-term visual memory and the phonetic verbal fluency tests. These results suggest that the T allele is a genetic risk factor for cognitive impairment in the elderly. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Genetic Variants at the 9p21.3 Locus Are Associated with Risk for Non-Compressible Artery Disease: Results from the ARTPER Study.
- Author
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Via M, Pera G, Forés R, Costa-Garrido A, Heras A, Baena-Díez JM, Pedrosa E, Clemente IC, Lamonja-Vicente N, Mataró M, Torán-Montserrat P, and Alzamora MT
- Subjects
- Humans, Risk Factors, Prospective Studies, Arteries, Peripheral Arterial Disease genetics, Atherosclerosis genetics
- Abstract
Peripheral artery disease (PAD) and non-compressible artery disease (NCAD) constitute predictors of subclinical atherosclerosis easily assessed through the ankle brachial index (ABI). Although both diseases show substantial genetic influences, few genetic association studies have focused on the ABI and PAD, and none have focused on NCAD. To overcome these limitations, we assessed the role of several candidate genes on the ABI, both in its continuous distribution and in the clinical manifestations associated to its extreme values: PAD and NCAD. We examined 13 candidate genomic regions in 1606 participants from the ARTPER study, a prospective population-based cohort, with the ABI assessed through ultrasonography. Association analyses were conducted independently for individuals with PAD (ABI < 0.9) or with NCAD (ABI > 1.4) vs. healthy participants. After including potential covariates and correction for multiple testing, minor alleles in the genetic markers rs10757278 and rs1333049, both in the 9p21.3 region, were significantly associated with a decreased risk of NCAD. Associations with the ABI showed limited support to these results. No significant associations were detected for PAD. The locus 9p21.3 constitutes the first genetic locus associated with NCAD, an assessment of subclinical atherosclerosis feasible for implementation in primary healthcare settings that has been systematically neglected from genetic studies.
- Published
- 2023
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50. Large-scale collaboration in ENIGMA-EEG: A perspective on the meta-analytic approach to link neurological and psychiatric liability genes to electrophysiological brain activity.
- Author
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Smit DJA, Andreassen OA, Boomsma DI, Burwell SJ, Chorlian DB, de Geus EJC, Elvsåshagen T, Gordon RL, Harper J, Hegerl U, Hensch T, Iacono WG, Jawinski P, Jönsson EG, Luykx JJ, Magne CL, Malone SM, Medland SE, Meyers JL, Moberget T, Porjesz B, Sander C, Sisodiya SM, Thompson PM, van Beijsterveldt CEM, van Dellen E, Via M, and Wright MJ
- Subjects
- Brain, Brain Mapping, Humans, Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted, Electroencephalography, Genome-Wide Association Study
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: The ENIGMA-EEG working group was established to enable large-scale international collaborations among cohorts that investigate the genetics of brain function measured with electroencephalography (EEG). In this perspective, we will discuss why analyzing the genetics of functional brain activity may be crucial for understanding how neurological and psychiatric liability genes affect the brain., Methods: We summarize how we have performed our currently largest genome-wide association study of oscillatory brain activity in EEG recordings by meta-analyzing the results across five participating cohorts, resulting in the first genome-wide significant hits for oscillatory brain function located in/near genes that were previously associated with psychiatric disorders. We describe how we have tackled methodological issues surrounding genetic meta-analysis of EEG features. We discuss the importance of harmonizing EEG signal processing, cleaning, and feature extraction. Finally, we explain our selection of EEG features currently being investigated, including the temporal dynamics of oscillations and the connectivity network based on synchronization of oscillations., Results: We present data that show how to perform systematic quality control and evaluate how choices in reference electrode and montage affect individual differences in EEG parameters., Conclusion: The long list of potential challenges to our large-scale meta-analytic approach requires extensive effort and organization between participating cohorts; however, our perspective shows that these challenges are surmountable. Our perspective argues that elucidating the genetic of EEG oscillatory activity is a worthwhile effort in order to elucidate the pathway from gene to disease liability., (© 2021 The Authors. Brain and Behavior published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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