Browsing by Author "Norambuena, Tomás"
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- ItemCorrection to: Novel loci and mapuche genetic ancestry are associated with pubertal growth traits in Chilean boys (Human Genetics, (2021), 10.1007/s00439-021-02290-3)(Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH, 2021) Vicuña, Lucas; Norambuena, Tomás; Miranda, José Patricio; Eyheramendy, Susana; Pereira, Ana; Mericq, Verónica; Ongaro, Linda; Montinaro, Francesco; Lorenzoni Santos, José Guillermo© 2021, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.Several typos were introduced in the original article and they have been corrected. The original article has been revised.
- ItemPostadmixture Selection on Chileans Targets Haplotype Involved in Pigmentation, Thermogenesis and Immune Defense against Pathogens(2020) Vicuña, Lucas ; Klimenkova, Olga ; Norambuena, Tomás; Martinez, Felipe I.; Fernandez, Mario I.; Shchur, Vladimir ; Eyheramendy, Susana ; Yi, SoojinDetection of positive selection signatures in populations around the world is helping to uncover recent human evolutionary history as well as the genetic basis of diseases. Most human evolutionary genomic studies have been performed in European, African, and Asian populations. However, populations with Native American ancestry have been largely underrepresented. Here, we used a genome-wide local ancestry enrichment approach complemented with neutral simulations to identify postadmixture adaptations underwent by admixed Chileans through gene flow from Europeans into local Native Americans. The top significant hits (P=2.4x10(-7)) are variants in a region on chromosome 12 comprising multiple regulatory elements. This region includes rs12821256, which regulates the expression of KITLG, a well-known gene involved in lighter hair and skin pigmentation in Europeans as well as in thermogenesis. Another variant from that region is associated with the long noncoding RNA RP11-13A1.1, which has been specifically involved in the innate immune response against infectious pathogens. Our results suggest that these genes were relevant for adaptation in Chileans following the Columbian exchange.