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Genetic Factors Associated with COPD Depend on the Ancestral Caucasian/Amerindian Component in the Mexican Population.

Gloria Pérez-RubioRamcés Falfan-ValenciaJuan Carlos Fernandez LópezAlejandra Ramírez-VenegasRafael de Jesús Hernández-ZentenoFernando Flores-TrujilloIrma Silva-Zolezzi
Published in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
Genetic variability influences the susceptibility to and severity of complex diseases; there is a lower risk of COPD in Hispanics than in non-Hispanic Caucasians. In this study, we included 830 Mexican-Mestizo subjects; 299 were patients with COPD secondary to tobacco smoking, and 531 were smokers without COPD. We employed a customized genotyping array of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). The population structure was evaluated by principal component analysis and allele association through a logistic regression model and haplotype identification. In this study, 118 individuals were identified with a high Caucasian component and 712 with a high Amerindian component. Independent of the ancestral contribution, two SNPs were associated with a reduced risk (p ≤ 0.01) of developing COPD in the CYP2A6 (rs4105144) and CYP2B6 (rs10426235) genes; however, a haplotype was associated with an increased risk of COPD (p = 0.007, OR = 2.47) in the CHRNA5-CHRNA3 loci among smokers with a high Caucasian component. In Mexican-Mestizo smokers, there are SNPs in genes that encode proteins responsible for the metabolism of nicotine associated with a lower risk of COPD; individuals with a high Caucasian component harboring a haplotype in the CHRNA5-CHRNA3 loci have a higher risk of suffering from COPD.
Keyphrases
  • chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
  • genome wide
  • lung function
  • smoking cessation
  • dna methylation
  • african american
  • cystic fibrosis
  • copy number
  • high throughput
  • air pollution
  • high resolution