Center for Integrative Genomics, School of Biology, Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta, GA, USA ; College of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Fiji National University Suva, Fiji.
Front Genet. 2012 Nov 9;3:243. doi: 10.3389/fgene.2012.00243. eCollection 2012.
In previous geographical genomics studies of the impact of lifestyle on gene expression inferred from microarray analysis of peripheral blood samples, we described the complex influences of culture, ethnicity, and gender in Morocco, and of pregnancy in Brisbane. Here we describe the use of nanofluidic Fluidigm quantitative RT-PCR arrays targeted at a set of 96 transcripts that are broadly informative of the major axes of immune gene expression, to explore the population structure of transcription in Fiji. As in Morocco, major differences are seen between the peripheral blood transcriptomes of rural villagers and residents of the capital city, Suva. The effect is much greater in Indian villages than in Melanesian highlanders and appears to be similar with respect to the nature of at least two axes of variation. Gender differences are much smaller than ethnicity or lifestyle effects. Body mass index is shown to associate with one of the axes as it does in Atlanta and Brisbane, establishing a link between the epidemiological transition of human metabolic disease, and gene expression profiles.
在之前的基于微阵列分析外周血样推断生活方式对基因表达影响的地理基因组学研究中,我们描述了摩洛哥文化、种族和性别以及布里斯班怀孕的复杂影响。在这里,我们描述了使用纳米流体动态定量 RT-PCR 阵列,靶向一组 96 个广泛反映免疫基因表达主要轴的转录本,以探索斐济的转录群体结构。与摩洛哥一样,在农村村民和首都苏瓦居民的外周血转录组之间也观察到了主要差异。在印度村庄中,这种差异比在美拉尼西亚高地人中更大,并且至少在两个变化轴的性质上似乎相似。性别差异比种族或生活方式的影响要小得多。体重指数与其中一个轴相关,就像在亚特兰大和布里斯班一样,这为人类代谢性疾病的流行病学转变与基因表达谱之间建立了联系。