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Featured researches published by Laura Riba.


Nature | 2012

Reconstructing Native American population history.

David Reich; Nick Patterson; Desmond D. Campbell; Arti Tandon; Stéphane Mazières; Nicolas Ray; María Victoria Parra; Winston Rojas; Constanza Duque; Natalia Mesa; Luis F. García; Omar Triana; Silvia Blair; Amanda Maestre; Juan C. Dib; Claudio M. Bravi; Graciela Bailliet; Daniel Corach; Tábita Hünemeier; Maria-Cátira Bortolini; Francisco M. Salzano; Maria Luiza Petzl-Erler; Victor Acuña-Alonzo; Carlos A. Aguilar-Salinas; Samuel Canizales-Quinteros; Teresa Tusié-Luna; Laura Riba; Maricela Rodríguez-Cruz; Mardia Lopez-Alarcón; Ramón Coral-Vazquez

The peopling of the Americas has been the subject of extensive genetic, archaeological and linguistic research; however, central questions remain unresolved. One contentious issue is whether the settlement occurred by means of a single migration or multiple streams of migration from Siberia. The pattern of dispersals within the Americas is also poorly understood. To address these questions at a higher resolution than was previously possible, we assembled data from 52 Native American and 17 Siberian groups genotyped at 364,470 single nucleotide polymorphisms. Here we show that Native Americans descend from at least three streams of Asian gene flow. Most descend entirely from a single ancestral population that we call ‘First American’. However, speakers of Eskimo–Aleut languages from the Arctic inherit almost half their ancestry from a second stream of Asian gene flow, and the Na-Dene-speaking Chipewyan from Canada inherit roughly one-tenth of their ancestry from a third stream. We show that the initial peopling followed a southward expansion facilitated by the coast, with sequential population splits and little gene flow after divergence, especially in South America. A major exception is in Chibchan speakers on both sides of the Panama isthmus, who have ancestry from both North and South America.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2007

A Genomewide Admixture Map for Latino Populations

Alkes L. Price; Nick Patterson; Fuli Yu; D. R. Cox; Alicja Waliszewska; Gavin J. McDonald; Arti Tandon; Christine Schirmer; Julie Neubauer; Gabriel Bedoya; Constanza Duque; Alberto Villegas; Maria Cátira Bortolini; Francisco M. Salzano; Carla Gallo; Guido Mazzotti; Marcela K. Tello-Ruiz; Laura Riba; Carlos A. Aguilar-Salinas; Samuel Canizales-Quinteros; Marta Menjivar; William Klitz; Brian E. Henderson; Christopher A. Haiman; Cheryl A. Winkler; Teresa Tusié-Luna; Andres Ruiz-Linares; David Reich

Admixture mapping is an economical and powerful approach for localizing disease genes in populations of recently mixed ancestry and has proven successful in African Americans. The method holds equal promise for Latinos, who typically inherit a mix of European, Native American, and African ancestry. However, admixture mapping in Latinos has not been practical because of the lack of a map of ancestry-informative markers validated in Native American and other populations. To address this, we screened multiple databases, containing millions of markers, to identify 4,186 markers that were putatively informative for determining the ancestry of chromosomal segments in Latino populations. We experimentally validated each of these markers in at least 232 new Latino, European, Native American, and African samples, and we selected a subset of 1,649 markers to form an admixture map. An advantage of our strategy is that we focused our map on markers distinguishing Native American from other ancestries and restricted it to markers with very similar frequencies in Europeans and Africans, which decreased the number of markers needed and minimized the possibility of false disease associations. We evaluated the effectiveness of our map for localizing disease genes in four Latino populations from both North and South America.


JAMA | 2014

Association of a Low-Frequency Variant in HNF1A With Type 2 Diabetes in a Latino Population

Karol Estrada; Ingvild Aukrust; Lise Bjørkhaug; Noël P. Burtt; Josep M. Mercader; Humberto García-Ortiz; Alicia Huerta-Chagoya; Hortensia Moreno-Macías; Geoffrey A. Walford; Jason Flannick; Amy Williams; María J. Gómez-Vázquez; Juan Carlos Fernández-López; Angélica Martínez-Hernández; Silvia Jiménez-Morales; Federico Centeno-Cruz; Elvia Mendoza-Caamal; Cristina Revilla-Monsalve; Sergio Islas-Andrade; Emilio J. Córdova; Xavier Soberón; María Elena González-Villalpando; E. Henderson; Lynne R. Wilkens; Loic Le Marchand; Olimpia Arellano-Campos; María Luisa Ordóñez-Sánchez; Maribel Rodríguez-Torres; Rosario Rodríguez-Guillén; Laura Riba

IMPORTANCE Latino populations have one of the highest prevalences of type 2 diabetes worldwide. OBJECTIVES To investigate the association between rare protein-coding genetic variants and prevalence of type 2 diabetes in a large Latino population and to explore potential molecular and physiological mechanisms for the observed relationships. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Whole-exome sequencing was performed on DNA samples from 3756 Mexican and US Latino individuals (1794 with type 2 diabetes and 1962 without diabetes) recruited from 1993 to 2013. One variant was further tested for allele frequency and association with type 2 diabetes in large multiethnic data sets of 14,276 participants and characterized in experimental assays. MAIN OUTCOME AND MEASURES Prevalence of type 2 diabetes. Secondary outcomes included age of onset, body mass index, and effect on protein function. RESULTS A single rare missense variant (c.1522G>A [p.E508K]) was associated with type 2 diabetes prevalence (odds ratio [OR], 5.48; 95% CI, 2.83-10.61; P = 4.4 × 10(-7)) in hepatocyte nuclear factor 1-α (HNF1A), the gene responsible for maturity onset diabetes of the young type 3 (MODY3). This variant was observed in 0.36% of participants without type 2 diabetes and 2.1% of participants with it. In multiethnic replication data sets, the p.E508K variant was seen only in Latino patients (n = 1443 with type 2 diabetes and 1673 without it) and was associated with type 2 diabetes (OR, 4.16; 95% CI, 1.75-9.92; P = .0013). In experimental assays, HNF-1A protein encoding the p.E508K mutant demonstrated reduced transactivation activity of its target promoter compared with a wild-type protein. In our data, carriers and noncarriers of the p.E508K mutation with type 2 diabetes had no significant differences in compared clinical characteristics, including age at onset. The mean (SD) age for carriers was 45.3 years (11.2) vs 47.5 years (11.5) for noncarriers (P = .49) and the mean (SD) BMI for carriers was 28.2 (5.5) vs 29.3 (5.3) for noncarriers (P = .19). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Using whole-exome sequencing, we identified a single low-frequency variant in the MODY3-causing gene HNF1A that is associated with type 2 diabetes in Latino populations and may affect protein function. This finding may have implications for screening and therapeutic modification in this population, but additional studies are required.


Diabetologia | 2009

Strong association of socioeconomic status with genetic ancestry in Latinos: implications for admixture studies of type 2 diabetes

Jose C. Florez; Alkes L. Price; Desmond D. Campbell; Laura Riba; María Victoria Parra; Fuli Yu; Constanza Duque; Richa Saxena; Natalia Gallego; Marcela K. Tello-Ruiz; Liliana Franco; Maribel Rodríguez-Torres; Alberto Villegas; Gabriel Bedoya; Carlos A. Aguilar-Salinas; María Teresa Tusié-Luna; Andres Ruiz-Linares; David Reich

Aims/hypothesisType 2 diabetes is more prevalent in US American minority populations of African or Native American descent than it is in European Americans. However, the proportion of this epidemiological difference that can be ascribed to genetic or environmental factors is unknown. To determine whether genetic ancestry is correlated with diabetes risk in Latinos, we estimated the proportion of European ancestry in case–control samples from Mexico and Colombia in whom socioeconomic status had been carefully ascertained.MethodsWe genotyped 67 ancestry-informative markers in 499 participants with type 2 diabetes and 197 controls from Medellín (Colombia), as well as in 163 participants with type 2 diabetes and 72 controls from central Mexico. Each participant was assigned a socioeconomic status scale via various measures.ResultsAlthough European ancestry was associated with lower diabetes risk in Mexicans (OR [95% CI] 0.06 [0.02–0.21], p = 2.0 × 10−5) and Colombians (OR 0.26 [0.08–0.78], p = 0.02), adjustment for socioeconomic status eliminated the association in the Colombian sample (OR 0.64 [0.19–2.12], p = 0.46) and significantly attenuated it in the Mexican sample (OR 0.17 [0.04–0.71], p = 0.02). Adjustment for BMI did not change the results.Conclusions/interpretationThe proportion of non-European ancestry is associated with both type 2 diabetes and lower socioeconomic status in admixed Latino populations from North and South America. We conclude that ancestry-directed search for genetic markers associated with type 2 diabetes in Latinos may benefit from information involving social factors, as these factors have a quantitatively important effect on type 2 diabetes risk relative to ancestry effects.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2013

Genomic study in Mexicans identifies a new locus for triglycerides and refines European lipid loci

Daphna Weissglas-Volkov; Carlos A. Aguilar-Salinas; Elina Nikkola; Kerry A Deere; Ivette Cruz-Bautista; Olimpia Arellano-Campos; Linda Liliana Muñoz-Hernandez; Lizeth Gomez-Munguia; María Luisa Ordóñez-Sánchez; Prasad M. V. Linga Reddy; Aldons J. Lusis; Niina Matikainen; Marja-Riitta Taskinen; Laura Riba; Rita M. Cantor; Janet S Sinsheimer; Teresa Tusié-Luna; Päivi Pajukanta

Background The Mexican population and others with Amerindian heritage exhibit a substantial predisposition to dyslipidemias and coronary heart disease. Yet, these populations remain underinvestigated by genomic studies, and to date, no genome-wide association (GWA) studies have been reported for lipids in these rapidly expanding populations. Methods and findings We performed a two-stage GWA study for hypertriglyceridemia and low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) in Mexicans (n=4361), and identified a novel Mexican-specific genome-wide significant locus for serum triglycerides (TGs) near the Niemann–Pick type C1 protein gene (p=2.43×10−08). Furthermore, three European loci for TGs (APOA5, GCKR and LPL), and four loci for HDL-C (ABCA1, CETP, LIPC and LOC55908) reached genome-wide significance in Mexicans. We used cross-ethnic mapping to narrow three European TG GWA loci, APOA5, MLXIPL, and CILP2 that were wide and contained multiple candidate variants in the European scan. At the APOA5 locus, this reduced the most likely susceptibility variants to one, rs964184. Importantly, our functional analysis demonstrated a direct link between rs964184 and postprandial serum apoAV protein levels, supporting rs964184 as the causative variant underlying the European and Mexican GWA signal. Overall, 52 of the 100 reported associations from European lipid GWA meta-analysis generalised to Mexicans. However, in 82 of the 100 European GWA loci, a different variant other than the European lead/best-proxy variant had the strongest regional evidence of association in Mexicans. Conclusions This first Mexican GWA study of lipids identified a novel GWA locus for high TG levels; used the interpopulation heterogeneity to significantly restrict three previously known European GWA signals, and surveyed whether the European lipid GWA SNPs extend to the Mexican population.


Diabetes | 2012

Contribution of Common Genetic Variation to the Risk of Type 2 Diabetes in the Mexican Mestizo Population

Marco Alberto Gamboa-Meléndez; Alicia Huerta-Chagoya; Hortensia Moreno-Macías; Paola Vázquez-Cárdenas; María Luisa Ordóñez-Sánchez; Rosario Rodríguez-Guillén; Laura Riba; Maribel Rodríguez-Torres; María Teresa Guerra-García; Luz Elizabeth Guillén-Pineda; Shweta Choudhry; Laura del Bosque-Plata; Samuel Canizales-Quinteros; Gustavo Pérez-Ortiz; Fernando Escobedo-Aguirre; Adalberto Parra; Israel Lerman-Garber; Carlos A. Aguilar-Salinas; María Teresa Tusié-Luna

Several studies have identified nearly 40 different type 2 diabetes susceptibility loci, mainly in European populations, but few of them have been evaluated in the Mexican population. The aim of this study was to examine the extent to which 24 common genetic variants previously associated with type 2 diabetes are associated in Mexican Mestizos. Twenty-four single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in or near genes (KCNJ11, PPARG, TCF7L2, SLC30A8, HHEX, CDKN2A/2B, CDKAL1, IGF2BP2, ARHGEF11, JAZF1, CDC123/CAMK1D, FTO, TSPAN8/LGR5, KCNQ1, THADA, ADAMTS9, NOTCH2, NXPH1, RORA, UBQLNL, and RALGPS2) were genotyped in Mexican Mestizos. A case-control association study comprising 1,027 type 2 diabetic individuals and 990 control individuals was conducted. To account for population stratification, a panel of 104 ancestry-informative markers was analyzed. Association to type 2 diabetes was found for rs13266634 (SLC30A8), rs7923837 (HHEX), rs10811661 (CDKN2A/2B), rs4402960 (IGF2BP2), rs12779790 (CDC123/CAMK1D), and rs2237892 (KCNQ1). In addition, rs7754840 (CDKAL1) was associated in the nonobese type 2 diabetic subgroup, and for rs7903146 (TCF7L2), association was observed for early-onset type 2 diabetes. Lack of association for the rest of the variants may have resulted from insufficient power to detect smaller allele effects.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2010

Genetically Determined Amerindian Ancestry Correlates with Increased Frequency of Risk Alleles for Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

Elena Sanchez; Ryan Webb; Astrid Rasmussen; Jennifer A. Kelly; Laura Riba; Kenneth M. Kaufman; Ignacio García-De La Torre; José Francisco Moctezuma; Marco A. Maradiaga-Ceceña; Mario H. Cardiel-Rios; Eduardo Acevedo; Mariano Cucho-Venegas; Mercedes García; Susana Gamron; Bernardo A. Pons-Estel; Carlos Vasconcelos; Javier Martin; Teresa Tusié-Luna; John B. Harley; Bruce Richardson; Amr H. Sawalha; Marta E. Alarcón-Riquelme

OBJECTIVE To assess whether genetically determined Amerindian ancestry predicts increased presence of risk alleles of known susceptibility genes for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). METHODS Single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within 16 confirmed genetic susceptibility loci for SLE were genotyped in a set of 804 Mestizo lupus patients and 667 Mestizo healthy controls. In addition, 347 admixture informative markers were genotyped. Individual ancestry proportions were determined using STRUCTURE. Association analysis was performed using PLINK, and correlation between ancestry and the presence of risk alleles was analyzed using linear regression. RESULTS A meta-analysis of the genetic association of the 16 SNPs across populations showed that TNFSF4, STAT4, ITGAM, and IRF5 were associated with lupus in a Hispanic Mestizo cohort enriched for European and Amerindian ancestry. In addition, 2 SNPs within the major histocompatibility complex region, previously shown to be associated in a genome-wide association study in Europeans, were also associated in Mestizos. Using linear regression, we predicted an average increase of 2.34 risk alleles when comparing an SLE patient with 100% Amerindian ancestry versus an SLE patient with 0% Amerindian ancestry (P < 0.0001). SLE patients with 43% more Amerindian ancestry were predicted to carry 1 additional risk allele. CONCLUSION Our results demonstrate that Amerindian ancestry is associated with an increased number of risk alleles for SLE.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2012

Impact of genetic ancestry and sociodemographic status on the clinical expression of systemic lupus erythematosus in American Indian-European populations.

Elena Sanchez; Astrid Rasmussen; Laura Riba; Eduardo M. Acevedo-Vásquez; Jennifer A. Kelly; Carl D. Langefeld; Adrianne H. Williams; Julie T. Ziegler; Mary E. Comeau; Miranda C. Marion; Ignacio García-De La Torre; Marco A. Maradiaga-Ceceña; Mario H. Cardiel; Jorge A. Esquivel-Valerio; Jacqueline Rodriguez-Amado; José Francisco Moctezuma; Pedro Miranda; Carlos E. Perandones; Cecilia Castel; Hugo A. Laborde; Paula Alba; Jorge Luis Musuruana; I. Annelise Goecke; Juan-Manuel Anaya; Kenneth M. Kaufman; Adam Adler; Stuart B. Glenn; Elizabeth E. Brown; Graciela S. Alarcón; Robert P. Kimberly

OBJECTIVE American Indian-Europeans, Asians, and African Americans have an excess morbidity from systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and a higher prevalence of lupus nephritis than do Caucasians. The aim of this study was to analyze the relationship between genetic ancestry and sociodemographic characteristics and clinical features in a large cohort of American Indian-European SLE patients. METHODS A total of 2,116 SLE patients of American Indian-European origin and 4,001 SLE patients of European descent for whom we had clinical data were included in the study. Genotyping of 253 continental ancestry-informative markers was performed on the Illumina platform. Structure and Admixture software were used to determine genetic ancestry proportions of each individual. Logistic regression was used to test the association between genetic ancestry and sociodemographic and clinical characteristics. Odds ratios (ORs) were calculated with 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs). RESULTS The average American Indian genetic ancestry of 2,116 SLE patients was 40.7%. American Indian genetic ancestry conferred increased risks of renal involvement (P < 0.0001, OR 3.50 [95% CI 2.63- 4.63]) and early age at onset (P < 0.0001). American Indian ancestry protected against photosensitivity (P < 0.0001, OR 0.58 [95% CI 0.44-0.76]), oral ulcers (P < 0.0001, OR 0.55 [95% CI 0.42-0.72]), and serositis (P < 0.0001, OR 0.56 [95% CI 0.41-0.75]) after adjustment for age, sex, and age at onset. However, age and sex had stronger effects than genetic ancestry on malar rash, discoid rash, arthritis, and neurologic involvement. CONCLUSION In general, American Indian genetic ancestry correlates with lower sociodemographic status and increases the risk of developing renal involvement and SLE at an earlier age.


Human Genetics | 1998

Molecular genetic analysis of patients carrying steroid 21-hydroxylase deficiency in the Mexican population: identification of possible new mutations and high prevalence of apparent germ-line mutations.

María Luisa Ordóñez-Sánchez; Salvador Ramírez-Jiménez; Antonio Ulises Lopez-Gutierrez; Laura Riba; Salvador Gamboa-Cardiel; Mabel Cerrillo-Hinojosa; Nelly Altamirano-Bustamante; Raúl Calzada-León; Carlos Robles-Valdés; Fernando Mendoza-Morfín; María Teresa Tusié-Luna

Abstract Steroid 21-hydroxylase deficiency is the underlying cause in over 90% of patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia, an inherited metabolic disorder of adrenal steroidogenesis. We have characterized 94 mutant alleles from 47 unrelated Mexican patients and the corresponding mutant alleles in their parents by amplification of the functional CYP21 gene by PCR, followed by direct sequence analysis. The study included patients diagnosed with the three clinical forms of the disease. Our results revealed: (1) the presence of relatively few mutations or combinations of mutations associated with particular phenotypes; (2) the presence of putative new mutations; (3) the finding of identical genotypes in patients displaying discordant phenotypes; (4) the identification of patients lacking all previous reported mutations; and (5) an apparent high frequency of germ-line mutations. The absence of previously reported mutations in about 22% of the disease alleles, the finding of putative new mutations in some of the patients lacking previously known mutations, and the apparent high prevalence of germ-line mutations make evident the differences in the genetic background leading to this disorder between the Caucasian and the Mexican populations.


Nature Communications | 2014

Amerindian-specific regions under positive selection harbour new lipid variants in Latinos.

Arthur Ko; Rita M. Cantor; Daphna Weissglas-Volkov; Elina Nikkola; Prasad M. V. Linga Reddy; Janet S Sinsheimer; Bogdan Pasaniuc; Robert H. Brown; Marcus Alvarez; Alejandra Rodríguez; Rosario Rodríguez-Guillén; Ivette C. Bautista; Olimpia Arellano-Campos; Linda Liliana Muñoz-Hernandez; Veikko Salomaa; Jaakko Kaprio; Antti Jula; Matti Jauhiainen; Markku Heliövaara; Olli T. Raitakari; Terho Lehtimäki; Johan G. Eriksson; Markus Perola; Kirk E. Lohmueller; Niina Matikainen; Marja-Riitta Taskinen; Maribel Rodríguez-Torres; Laura Riba; Teresa Tusié-Luna; Carlos A. Aguilar-Salinas

Dyslipidemia and obesity are especially prevalent in populations with Amerindian backgrounds, such as Mexican–Americans, which predispose these populations to cardiovascular disease. Here we design an approach, known as the cross-population allele screen (CPAS), which we conduct prior to a genome-wide association study (GWAS) in 19,273 Europeans and Mexicans, in order to identify Amerindian risk genes in Mexicans. Utilizing CPAS to restrict the GWAS input variants to only those differing in frequency between the two populations, we identify novel Amerindian lipid genes, receptor-related orphan receptor alpha (RORA) and salt-inducible kinase 3 (SIK3), and three loci previously unassociated with dyslipidemia or obesity. We also detect lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and apolipoprotein A5 (APOA5) harbouring specific Amerindian signatures of risk variants and haplotypes. Notably, we observe that SIK3 and one novel lipid locus underwent positive selection in Mexicans. Furthermore, after a high-fat meal, the SIK3 risk variant carriers display high triglyceride levels. These findings suggest that Amerindian-specific genetic architecture leads to a higher incidence of dyslipidemia and obesity in modern Mexicans.

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Carlos A. Aguilar-Salinas

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Teresa Tusié-Luna

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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María Luisa Ordóñez-Sánchez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Samuel Canizales-Quinteros

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Maribel Rodríguez-Torres

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Rita M. Cantor

University of California

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