McAllister Heart Institute, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
PLoS One. 2009 Dec 9;4(12):e8183. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0008183.
Individuals of African descent in the United States suffer disproportionately from diseases with a metabolic etiology (obesity, metabolic syndrome, and diabetes), and from the pathological consequences of these disorders (hypertension and cardiovascular disease).
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using a combination of genetic/genomic and bioinformatics approaches, we identified a large number of genes that were both differentially expressed between American subjects self-identified to be of either African or European ancestry and that also contained single nucleotide polymorphisms that distinguish distantly related ancestral populations. Several of these genes control the metabolism of simple carbohydrates and are direct targets for the SREBP1, a metabolic transcription factor also differentially expressed between our study populations.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These data support the concept of stable patterns of gene transcription unique to a geographic ancestral lineage. Differences in expression of several carbohydrate metabolism genes suggest both genetic and transcriptional mechanisms contribute to these patterns and may play a role in exacerbating the disproportionate levels of obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease observed in Americans with African ancestry.
美国的非裔个体不成比例地患有代谢病因(肥胖、代谢综合征和糖尿病)相关的疾病,以及这些疾病的病理后果(高血压和心血管疾病)。
方法/主要发现:我们使用遗传/基因组和生物信息学方法的组合,鉴定了大量基因,这些基因在自我认同为非洲或欧洲血统的美国个体之间存在差异表达,并且还包含区分远缘祖先群体的单核苷酸多态性。这些基因中的几个控制简单碳水化合物的代谢,并且是 SREBP1 的直接靶标,SREBP1 是一种代谢转录因子,在我们的研究人群中也存在差异表达。
结论/意义:这些数据支持了特定地理祖先谱系中存在稳定的基因转录模式的概念。几种碳水化合物代谢基因表达的差异表明遗传和转录机制都有助于这些模式,并可能在加剧具有非洲血统的美国人中观察到的肥胖、糖尿病和心血管疾病不成比例的水平方面发挥作用。