4.7 Article

Who Are the Okinawans? Ancestry, Genome Diversity, and Implications for the Genetic Study of Human Longevity From a Geographically Isolated Population

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/gerona/glt203

Keywords

Okinawa; Longevity; Ancestry; Genome diversity; HapMap

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [K01 AG022782, R01 AG023692, RO3 AG02-293-01, K08 AG22788-02, R01MH093500, R01 AG030474, 5R01AG027060-06, 5R01AG038707-02, U19 AG023122, U01 MH092758]
  2. Japan Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare
  3. Japan Society for Promotion of Sciences

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Isolated populations have advantages for genetic studies of longevity from decreased haplotype diversity and long-range linkage disequilibrium. This permits smaller sample sizes without loss of power, among other utilities. Little is known about the genome of the Okinawans, a potential population isolate, recognized for longevity. Therefore, we assessed genetic diversity, structure, and admixture in Okinawans, and compared this with Caucasians, Chinese, Japanese, and Africans from HapMap II, genotyped on the same Affymetrix GeneChip Human Mapping 500K array. Principal component analysis, haplotype coverage, and linkage disequilibrium decay revealed a distinct Okinawan genome-more homogeneity, less haplotype diversity, and longer range linkage disequilibrium. Population structure and admixture analyses utilizing 52 global reference populations from the Human Genome Diversity Cell Line Panel demonstrated that Okinawans clustered almost exclusively with East Asians. Sibling relative risk (lambda(s)) analysis revealed that siblings of Okinawan centenarians have 3.11 times (females) and 3.77 times (males) more likelihood of centenarianism. These findings suggest that Okinawans are genetically distinct and share several characteristics of a population isolate, which are prone to develop extreme phenotypes (eg, longevity) from genetic drift, natural selection, and population bottlenecks. These data support further exploration of genetic influence on longevity in the Okinawans.

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