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Dive into the research topics where Beatriz Sobrino is active.

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Featured researches published by Beatriz Sobrino.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2002

The Making of the African mtDNA Landscape

Antonio Salas; Martin B. Richards; Tomás De la Fe; Marı́a-Victoria Lareu; Beatriz Sobrino; Paula Sánchez-Diz; Vincent Macaulay; Angel Carracedo

Africa presents the most complex genetic picture of any continent, with a time depth for mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) lineages >100,000 years. The most recent widespread demographic shift within the continent was most probably the Bantu dispersals, which archaeological and linguistic evidence suggest originated in West Africa 3,000-4,000 years ago, spreading both east and south. Here, we have carried out a thorough phylogeographic analysis of mtDNA variation in a total of 2,847 samples from throughout the continent, including 307 new sequences from southeast African Bantu speakers. The results suggest that the southeast Bantu speakers have a composite origin on the maternal line of descent, with approximately 44% of lineages deriving from West Africa, approximately 21% from either West or Central Africa, approximately 30% from East Africa, and approximately 5% from southern African Khoisan-speaking groups. The ages of the major founder types of both West and East African origin are consistent with the likely timing of Bantu dispersals, with those from the west somewhat predating those from the east. Despite this composite picture, the southeastern African Bantu groups are indistinguishable from each other with respect to their mtDNA, suggesting that they either had a common origin at the point of entry into southeastern Africa or have undergone very extensive gene flow since.


International Journal of Legal Medicine | 2005

Hierarchical analysis of 30 Y-chromosome SNPs in European populations

Maria Brion; Beatriz Sobrino; Alejandro Blanco-Verea; M.V. Lareu; Angel Carracedo

Analysis of Y-chromosome haplogroups defined by binary polymorphisms, has became a standard approach for studying the origin of modern human populations and for measuring the variability between them. Furthermore, the simplicity and population specificity of binary polymorphisms allows inferences to be drawn about the population origin of any male sample of interest for forensic purposes. From the 245 binary polymorphisms that can be analysed by PCR described in the Y Chromosome Consortium tree, we have selected 30 markers. The set of 30 has been grouped into 4 multiplexes in order to determine the most frequent haplogroups in Europe, using only 1 or 2 multiplexes. In this way, we avoid typing unnecessary SNPs to define the final haplogroup saving effort and cost, since we only need to type 9 SNPs in the best case and in the worst case, no more than 17 SNPs to define the haplogroup. The selected method for allele discrimination was a single base extension reaction using the SNaPshot multiplex kit. A total of 292 samples from 8 different districts of Galicia (northwest Spain) were analysed with this strategy. No significant differences were detected among the different districts, except for the population from Mariña Lucense, which showed a distant haplogroup frequency but not higher Φst values.


Nature | 2016

Mitochondrial and nuclear DNA matching shapes metabolism and healthy ageing

Ana Latorre-Pellicer; Raquel Moreno-Loshuertos; Ana Victoria Lechuga-Vieco; Fátima Sánchez-Cabo; Carlos Torroja; Rebeca Acín-Pérez; Enrique Calvo; Esther Aix; Andrés González-Guerra; Angela Logan; María Luisa Bernad-Miana; Eduardo Romanos; Raquel Cruz; Sara Cogliati; Beatriz Sobrino; Angel Carracedo; Acisclo Pérez-Martos; Patricio Fernández-Silva; Jesús Ruiz-Cabello; Michael P. Murphy; Ignacio Flores; Jesús Vázquez; José Antonio Enríquez

Human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) shows extensive within-population sequence variability. Many studies suggest that mtDNA variants may be associated with ageing or diseases, although mechanistic evidence at the molecular level is lacking. Mitochondrial replacement has the potential to prevent transmission of disease-causing oocyte mtDNA. However, extension of this technology requires a comprehensive understanding of the physiological relevance of mtDNA sequence variability and its match with the nuclear-encoded mitochondrial genes. Studies in conplastic animals allow comparison of individuals with the same nuclear genome but different mtDNA variants, and have provided both supporting and refuting evidence that mtDNA variation influences organismal physiology. However, most of these studies did not confirm the conplastic status, focused on younger animals, and did not investigate the full range of physiological and phenotypic variability likely to be influenced by mitochondria. Here we systematically characterized conplastic mice throughout their lifespan using transcriptomic, proteomic, metabolomic, biochemical, physiological and phenotyping studies. We show that mtDNA haplotype profoundly influences mitochondrial proteostasis and reactive oxygen species generation, insulin signalling, obesity, and ageing parameters including telomere shortening and mitochondrial dysfunction, resulting in profound differences in health longevity between conplastic strains.


Forensic Science International-genetics | 2007

Evaluation of the Genplex SNP typing system and a 49plex forensic marker panel.

C. Phillips; Rixun Fang; David Ballard; M. Fondevila; C. Harrison; F. Hyland; E. Musgrave-Brown; C. Proff; Eva Ramos-Luis; Beatriz Sobrino; Angel Carracedo; Manohar R. Furtado; D. Syndercombe Court; Peter M. Schneider

Using a 52 SNP marker set previously developed for forensic analysis, a novel 49plex assay has been developed based on the Genplex typing system, a modification of SNPlex chemistry (both Applied Biosystems) using oligo-ligation of pre-amplified DNA and dye-labeled, mobility modified detection probes. This gives highly predictable electrophoretic mobility of the allelic products generated from the assay to allow detection with standard capillary electrophoresis analyzers. The loci chosen comprise the 48 most informative autosomal SNPs from the SNPforID core discrimination set supplemented with the amelogenin gender marker. These SNPs are evenly distributed across all 22 autosomes, exhibit balanced polymorphisms in three major population groups and have been previously shown to be effective markers for forensic analysis. We tested the accuracy and reproducibility of the Genplex system in three SNPforID laboratories, each using a different Applied Biosystems Genetic Analyzer. Genotyping concordance was measured using replicates of 44 standardized DNA controls and by comparing genotypes for the same samples generated by the TaqMan, SNaPshot and Sequenom iPLEX SNP typing systems. The degree of informativeness of the 48 SNPs for forensic analysis was measured using previously estimated allele frequencies to derive the cumulative match probability and in paternity analysis using 24 trios previously typed with 18 STRs together with three CEPH families with extensive sibships typed with the 15 STRs in the Identifiler kit.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2010

Association of common copy number variants at the glutathione S -transferase genes and rare novel genomic changes with schizophrenia

Benjamín Rodríguez-Santiago; Anna Brunet; Beatriz Sobrino; Clara Serra-Juhé; R Flores; Ll Armengol; Elisabet Vilella; Elisabeth Gabau; Miriam Guitart; Roser Guillamat; Lourdes Martorell; Joaquín Valero; Alfonso Gutiérrez-Zotes; Antonio Labad; Angel Carracedo; Xavier Estivill; Luis A. Pérez-Jurado

Copy number variants (CNVs) are a substantial source of human genetic diversity, influencing the variable susceptibility to multifactorial disorders. Schizophrenia is a complex illness thought to be caused by a number of genetic and environmental effects, few of which have been clearly defined. Recent reports have found several low prevalent CNVs associated with the disease. We have used a multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification-based (MLPA) method to target 140 previously reported and putatively relevant gene-containing CNV regions in 654 schizophrenic patients and 604 controls for association studies. Most genotyped CNVs (95%) showed very low (<1%) population frequency. A few novel rare variants were only present in patients suggesting a possible pathogenic involvement, including 1.39 Mb overlapping duplications at 22q11.23 found in two unrelated patients, and duplications of the somatostatin receptor 5 gene (SSTR5) at 16p13.3 in three unrelated patients. Furthermore, among the few relatively common CNVs observed in patients and controls, the combined analysis of gene copy number genotypes at two glutathione S-transferase (GST) genes, GSTM1 (glutathione S-transferase mu 1) (1p13.3) and GSTT2 (glutathione S-transferase theta 2) (22q11.23), showed a statistically significant association of non-null genotypes at both loci with an additive effect for increased vulnerability to schizophrenia (odds ratio of 1.92; P=0.0008). Our data provide complementary evidences for low prevalent, but highly penetrant chromosomal variants associated with schizophrenia, as well as for common CNVs that may act as susceptibility factors by disturbing glutathione metabolism.


Forensic Science International-genetics | 2015

Inter-laboratory evaluation of SNP-based forensic identification by massively parallel sequencing using the Ion PGM™.

Mayra Eduardoff; Carla Santos; M. de la Puente; T.E. Gross; M. Fondevila; Christina Strobl; Beatriz Sobrino; David Ballard; Peter M. Schneider; Angel Carracedo; M.V. Lareu; Walther Parson; C. Phillips

Next generation sequencing (NGS) offers the opportunity to analyse forensic DNA samples and obtain massively parallel coverage of targeted short sequences with the variants they carry. We evaluated the levels of sequence coverage, genotyping precision, sensitivity and mixed DNA patterns of a prototype version of the first commercial forensic NGS kit: the HID-Ion AmpliSeq™ Identity Panel with 169-markers designed for the Ion PGM™ system. Evaluations were made between three laboratories following closely matched Ion PGM™ protocols and a simple validation framework of shared DNA controls. The sequence coverage obtained was extensive for the bulk of SNPs targeted by the HID-Ion AmpliSeq™ Identity Panel. Sensitivity studies showed 90-95% of SNP genotypes could be obtained from 25 to 100pg of input DNA. Genotyping concordance tests included Coriell cell-line control DNA analyses checked against whole-genome sequencing data from 1000 Genomes and Complete Genomics, indicating a very high concordance rate of 99.8%. Discordant genotypes detected in rs1979255, rs1004357, rs938283, rs2032597 and rs2399332 indicate these loci should be excluded from the panel. Therefore, the HID-Ion AmpliSeq™ Identity Panel and Ion PGM™ system provide a sensitive and accurate forensic SNP genotyping assay. However, low-level DNA produced much more varied sequence coverage and in forensic use the Ion PGM™ system will require careful calibration of the total samples loaded per chip to preserve the genotyping reliability seen in routine forensic DNA. Furthermore, assessments of mixed DNA indicate the users control of sequence analysis parameter settings is necessary to ensure mixtures are detected robustly. Given the sensitivity of Ion PGM™, this aspect of forensic genotyping requires further optimisation before massively parallel sequencing is applied to routine casework.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2005

SNP Typing in Forensic Genetics

Beatriz Sobrino; Angel Carracedo

Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are emerging as new markers of interest to the forensic community because of their abundance in the human genome, their low mutation rate, the opportunity they present of analyzing smaller fragments of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) than with short tandem repeats--important in degraded DNA samples--and the possibility of automating the analysis with high-throughput technologies. Many new technologies for genotyping SNPs have been developed in the past few years. We describe the principles of the allelic discrimination reactions and the technologies used for each of them. The aim of this chapter is to help in the understanding of the methodologies used in SNP genotyping and in the selection of the most appropriate techniques for forensic purposes.


Acta Ophthalmologica | 2011

Genetic association study of age-related macular degeneration in the Spanish population

Maria Brion; Manuel Sánchez-Salorio; Marta Corton; María de la Fuente; Belen Pazos; Mohammad Othman; Anand Swaroop; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Beatriz Sobrino; Angel Carracedo

Acta Ophthalmol. 2011: 89: e12–e22


Forensic Science International | 2001

The use of the LightCycler for the detection of Y chromosome SNPs

Maviki Lareu; Jorge Puente; Beatriz Sobrino; Beatriz Quintáns; Maria Brion; Angel Carracedo

A novel methodology based on PCR monitoring on-line with fluorescent formats using the LightCycler for Y chromosome SNP typing is proposed. The main advantages of the system are the time necessary for the analysis (which is around 20 min), the robustness and the accuracy of the method and especially its sensitivity, which permits the detection of the male component in male-female mixtures up to 1:300 for some of the SNPs. Singleplexes of four different SNPs (M9, sY81, SRY-1532 and SRY-2627) as well as two duplexes (M9 and sY81 on the one hand and SRY-1532 and SRY-2627 on the other) were efficiently implemented. A simultaneous amplification and analysis of the four SNPs is also possible. It seems difficult with the current methodology to implement more than a quadruplex.


Forensic Science International | 2010

New technologies in the genetic approach to sudden cardiac death in the young

Maria Brion; Inés Quintela; Beatriz Sobrino; M.D. Torres; Catarina Allegue; Angel Carracedo

Sudden cardiac death (SCD) is a major health problem and constitutes one of the most important unsolved challenges in the practice of forensic pathology due to the failure to determine the cause of death. Particularly, an important number of previously healthy young people who have died suddenly and unexpectedly are consequence of genetic heart disorders, either structural cardiomyopathies or arrhythmogenic abnormalities. The technological approach to analyze this type of genetically heterogeneous disorders is far from easy but nowadays the variety of chemistries and methodologies improves choice. This review offers to the reader a state of the art of the available technologies for the study of genetics of sudden cardiac death, including mutation screening approaches, genome wide association studies, and the recently developed next-generation sequencing.

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Angel Carracedo

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Maria Brion

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Jorge Amigo

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Alejandro Blanco-Verea

University of Santiago de Compostela

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C. Phillips

University of Santiago de Compostela

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M.V. Lareu

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Antonio Salas

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Javier Costas

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Mario Páramo

University of Santiago de Compostela

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