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Featured researches published by S. A. Borinskaya.


Annals of Human Genetics | 2009

Refined Geographic Distribution of the Oriental ALDH2*504Lys (nee 487Lys) Variant

Hui Li; S. A. Borinskaya; Kimio Yoshimura; Nina Kal’ina; Andrey Marusin; V. A. Stepanov; Zhendong Qin; Shagufta Khaliq; Mi-Young Lee; Yajun Yang; Aisha Mohyuddin; David Gurwitz; Syed Qasim Mehdi; Evgeny I. Rogaev; Li Jin; N. K. Yankovsky; Judith R. Kidd; Kenneth K. Kidd

Mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH2) is one of the most important enzymes in human alcohol metabolism. The oriental ALDH2*504Lys variant functions as a dominant negative, greatly reducing activity in heterozygotes and abolishing activity in homozygotes. This allele is associated with serious disorders such as alcohol liver disease, late onset Alzheimer disease, colorectal cancer, and esophageal cancer, and is best known for protection against alcoholism. Many hundreds of papers in various languages have been published on this variant, providing allele frequency data for many different populations. To develop a highly refined global geographic distribution of ALDH2*504Lys, we have collected new data on 4,091 individuals from 86 population samples and assembled published data on a total of 80,691 individuals from 366 population samples. The allele is essentially absent in all parts of the world except East Asia. The ALDH2*504Lys allele has its highest frequency in Southeast China, and occurs in most areas of China, Japan, Korea, Mongolia, and Indochina with frequencies gradually declining radially from Southeast China. As the indigenous populations in South China have much lower frequencies than the southern Han migrants from Central China, we conclude that ALDH2*504Lys was carried by Han Chinese as they spread throughout East Asia. Esophageal cancer, with its highest incidence in East Asia, may be associated with ALDH2*504Lys because of a toxic effect of increased acetaldehyde in the tissue where ingested ethanol has its highest concentration. While the distributions of esophageal cancer and ALDH2*504Lys do not precisely correlate, that does not disprove the hypothesis. In general the study of fine scale geographic distributions of ALDH2*504Lys and diseases may help in understanding the multiple relationships among genes, diseases, environments, and cultures.


Russian Journal of Genetics | 2005

Frequencies of Y Chromosome Binary Haplogroups in Belarussians

V. N. Kharkov; V. A. Stepanov; S. P. Feshchenko; S. A. Borinskaya; N. K. Yankovsky; V. P. Puzyrev

The compositions and frequencies of Y-chromosome haplogroups identified by genotyping 23 biallelic loci of its nonrecombining region (YAP, 92R7, DYF155S2, 12f2, Tat, M9, M17, M25, M89, M124, M130, M170, M172, M174, M173, M178, M201, M207, M242, M269, P21, P25, and P37) have been determined in a sample of 68 Belarussians. Eleven haplogroups have been found in the Belarussian gene pool (E, F*, G, I, I1b, J2, N3a*, Q*, R1*, R1a1, and R1b3). Haplogroup R1a1 is the most frequent; it includes 46% of all Y chromosomes in this sample. The frequencies of haplogroups I1b and I are 17.6 and 7.3%, respectively. Haplogroup N3a* is the next in frequency. The frequencies of haplogroups E, J2, and R1b3 are 4.4% each; that of R1* is 3%; and those of F*, G, and Q* are 1.5% each.


Russian Journal of Genetics | 2004

Gene Pool Structure of Eastern Ukrainians as Inferred from the Y-Chromosome Haplogroups

V. N. Kharkov; V. A. Stepanov; S. A. Borinskaya; Zh. M. Kozhekbaeva; Vladislava Gusar; E. Ya. Grechanina; V. P. Puzyrev; E. K. Khusnutdinova; N. K. Yankovsky

Y chromosomes from representative sample of Eastern Ukrainians (94 individuals) were analyzed for composition and frequencies of haplogroups, defined by 11 biallelic loci located in non-recombining part of the chromosome (SRY1532, YAP, 92R7, DYF155S2, 12f2, Tat, M9, M17, M25,M89, andM56). In the Ukrainian gene, pool six haplogroups were revealed: E, F (including G and I), J, N3, P, and R1a1. These haplogroups were earlier detected in a study of Y-chromosome diversity on the territory of Europe as a whole. The major haplogroup in the Ukrainian gene pool, haplogroup R1a1 (earlier designated HG3), accounted for about 44% of all Y chromosomes in the sample examined. This haplogroup is thought to mark the migration patterns of the early Indo-Europeans and is associated with the distribution of the Kurgan archaeological culture. The second major haplogroup is haplogroup F (21.3%), which is a combination of the lineages differing by the time of appearance. Haplogroup P found with the frequency of 9.6%, represents the genetic contribution of the population originating from the ancient autochthonous population of Europe. Haplogroups J and E (11.7 and 4.2%, respectively) mark the migration patterns of the Middle-Eastern agriculturists during the Neolithic. The presence of the N3 lineage (9.6%) is likely explained by a contribution of the assimilated Finno–Ugric tribes. The data on the composition and frequencies of Y-chromosome haplogroups in the sample studied substantially supplement the existing picture of the male lineage distribution in the Eastern Slav population.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2009

Distribution of the Alcohol Dehydrogenase ADH1B∗47His Allele in Eurasia

S. A. Borinskaya; Nina R Kalina; Andrey Marusin; Gulnaz Faskhutdinova; Irina Morozova; Ildus Kutuev; Vladimir Koshechkin; Elza Khusnutdinova; V. A. Stepanov; V. P. Puzyrev; Nick Yankovsky; Evgeny I. Rogaev

The URL for data presented herein is as follows:Allele Frequency Database (ALFRED), http://alfred.med.yale.edu/alfred


Legal Medicine | 2010

Genetic variability of 15 autosomal STR loci in Russian populations.

V. A. Stepanov; Alexander V. Melnikov; Andrey Yu. Lash-Zavada; Vladimir Kharkov; S. A. Borinskaya; Tatiana V. Tyazhelova; O. V. Zhukova; Yuri V. Schneider; Irina N. Shil’nikova; V. P. Puzyrev; Anna A. Rybakova; Nikolai K. Yankovsky

Allele frequencies for 15 STRs (CSF1PO, D3S1358, D5S818, D7S820, D8S1179, D13S317, D16S539, D18S51, D21S11, FGA, Penta D, Penta E, THO1, TPOX, and vWA) in the PowerPlex 16 System (Promega Corporation) were assessed in 386 individuals from five Russian urban populations. No significant between-population differences in frequencies and molecular variance of 15 microsatellites were revealed. For all 15 loci, the combined matching probability is 3.19 x 10(-18) and the power of exclusion is 99.99989%.


International Journal of Circumpolar Health | 2008

Genes related to the metabolism of nutrients in the Kola Sami population

Andrew Kozlov; S. A. Borinskaya; Galina Vershubsky; Eugeny Vasilyev; Vasily Popov; Maria Sokolova; Ekaterina Sanina; Nina Kaljina; Dmitry Rebrikov; Dmitry Lisitsyn; N. K. Yankovsky

OBJECTIVES: The environmental and life-style conditions of the Kola Sami could have influenced the population-specific frequencies of the AGXTProIILeu allele, and certain alleles of APOE and LCT genes, involved respectively, in the metabolism of animal proteins, lipids and milk sugar. Study Design. DNA samples were collected from the Sami population of Lovozero settlement (Murmansk Region) in 2005. METHODS: The analysis of the traditional diet of the Kola Sami was made using the data of ethnographic studies conducted in the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth centuries. Frequencies of the AGXT ProllLeu, APOE*e4 alleles and LCT gene CC w9 genotype were defined by molecular-genetic analysis. RESULTS: The specificity of the Kola Sami gene pool is in the lower frequency of APOE*e4 allele compared with the Sami of Finland (0.205 and 0.310, respectively) and when compared with other groups (except the Skolt) in the higher frequency of hypolactasia conditioned by the CC(-13910) genotype of the LCT gene (0.484). CONCLUSIONS: The high prevalence of the AGXT allele T bearers among Kola Sami (0.273) does not contradict the hypothesis of the adaptive role this allele plays in populations with a traditionally high intake of meat.


Russian Journal of Genetics | 2007

Polymorphism of the apolipoprotein E gene (APOE) in the populations of Russia and neighboring countries

S. A. Borinskaya; N. R. Kal’ina; E. D. Sanina; Zh. M. Kozhekbaeva; E. Yu. Gupalo; I. V. Garmash; P. P. Ogurtsov; O. N. Parshukova; S. G. Bojko; E. M. Veselovsky; G. G. Vershubskaya; A. I. Kozlov; Evgeny I. Rogaev; N. K. Yankovsky

Allele and genotype frequencies for the locus encoding apolipoprotein E, involved in the regulation of lipid metabolism (APOE), were evaluated in 16 populations representing 12 ethnic groups (a total of 1103 subjects) from Russia and neighboring countries. In the populations examined, the frequencies of allele ɛ4, which is the risk factor of Alzheimer’s disease and coronary heart disease, varied from less than 5 to more than 20%, while the variation of the major ɛ3 allele in these populations ranged from less than 75 to 95%. The frequencies of alleles ɛ3 and ɛ4 were 0.714 and 0.205 in Saami, 0.735 and 0.220 in Komi-Izhemts, 0.770 and 0.130 in Komi-Zyryans, 0.771 and 0.149 in Udmurts, 0.734 and 0.149 in Maris, 0.841 and 0.122 in Evenks, 0.788 and 0.163 in Buryats, 0.764 and 0.202 in Chukchi, 0.875 and 0.075 in Iranians, 0.956 and 0.044 in mountain-dwellers of the Pamirs, 0.771 and 0.094 in Ukrainians, and 0.795 and 0.091 in Belarussians, respectively. In Russians from different regions of the country, the frequencies of these alleles were 0.728 and 0.139 (Kostroma), 0.795 and 0.105 (Moscow), 0.857 and 0.092 (Rostov-on-Don), and 0.824 and 0.083 (Krasnodar), respectively. The latitudinal distribution of the APOE ɛ3 and ɛ4 allele frequencies in the populations examined was comparable to the frequency distribution pattern of these alleles in other populations of Eurasia.


Russian Journal of Genetics | 2013

[Allele frequency distributions of -174G/C polymorphism in regulatory region of interleukin 6 gene (IL6) in Russian and worldwide populations].

S. A. Borinskaya; A. S. Gureev; A. A. Orlova; E. D. Sanina; A. A. Kim; F. Gasemianrodsari; V. I. Shirmanov; Oleg Balanovsky; D. V. Rebrikov; A. V. Koshechkin; N. K. Yankovsky

Allele and genotype frequencies of the −174G/C polymorphism (rs1800795) in the regulatory region of the IL6 gene, which encode anti-inflammatory cytokine interleukin 6, were determined in seven populations representing five ethnic groups from the European part of Russia (440 individuals), as well as in small cohorts that represent populations from 24 countries of Africa and Eurasia (365 individuals). The maps of the geographic distribution of the −174G/C allele frequencies were constructed based on personal (22 populations) and the literature data (66 populations), and the data from dbSNP database obtained by the HapMap project (10 populations). The frequency of the −174G allele varied from 45 to 100% and was characterized by nonrandom geographic distribution. These data could reflect the adaptive load of the alleles examined, which was different in different regions of the world. It is suggested that the level of pathogen prevalence is one of the environmental factors that determine different adaptive values of the IL6*-174G/C alleles. This suggestion is supported by a positive correlation between the −174G allele frequency and level of pathogen prevalence calculated based on historical data (R = 0.768; p < 0.0001).


Molecular Biology | 2006

Molecular diagnosis and frequencies of primary hypolactasia in populations of RUSSIA and neighboring countries

S. A. Borinskaya; D. V. Rebrikov; V. V. Nefedova; I. A. Kofiadi; M. V. Sokolova; E. V. Kolchina; E. A. Kulikova; V. N. Chernyshov; S. I. Kutsev; A. V. Polonikov; V. P. Ivanov; A. I. Kozlov; N. K. Yankovsky

Normally, the ability to digest milk sugar (lactose) is present in every child, but not in every adult. The decrease in lactase synthesis (hypolactasia) results in the inability to digest whole milk. Recent studies of the Finnish population have associated lactase persistence in adults with allele T of the C/T−13910 polymorphism located upstream of the lactase gene; a 100% correlation of primary hypolactasia with genotype C/C has been proved. In this study, the allele and genotype frequencies of C/T−13910 were determined in populations of Russia. The frequencies of genotype C/C, varying from 36.6% in Russians to 88.2% in Chukchi, were close to the published medical and epidemiological data on the hypolactasia frequencies in these populations. Genotyping was carried out by three different methods to determine the optimal one. Genotype C/C proved to be the key determinant of primary hypolactasia. It was assumed that DNA diagnosis of genotype C/C provides a predictive test to detect primary hypolactasia long before its clinical manifestation.


Russian Journal of Genetics | 2004

Analysis of the DRD4 Gene Polymorphism in Populations of Russia and Neighboring Countries

S. A. Borinskaya; Zh. M. Kozhekbaeva; E. V. Gorbunova; M. V. Sokolova; E. B. Yur'ev; T. V. Tiazhelova; E. Ya. Grechanina; E. K. Khusnutdinova; N. K. Yankovsky

Allele and genotype frequencies of the VNTR polymorphism in the third exon of humanDRD4 gene were determined in 544 individuals living in Russia (Russians, Bashkirs, Tatars, and Mordovians) and in the neighboring countries (Kazakhs and Ukrainians). The data obtained were compared with the allele frequency distribution patterns reported for the populations of Eurasia. Similarly to other Eurasian populations, in our population samples R4 allele was prevalent (64 to 87%). The frequency of this allele in the populations of Western Europe constitute 61 to 71%, while in the populations of Asia it varies from 74 to 96%. In this respect, the populations studied occupied the intermediate position. In the samples examined the R7 allele frequency decreased from 7% in Ukrainians to 1% in Bashkirs, while in Kazakhs and Mordovians the allele was absent. This finding was consistent with theR7 allele distribution pattern in the populations of Eurasia, characterized by higher frequency in the West and lower frequency or absence of the allele in the East. In the group of 22 Eurasian populations, the R7 allele frequency negatively correlated with the frequency of the R4 allele (r = -0.86 at P < 0.001). Unlike the R4 and R7 alleles, the frequency of which changed in the eastward direction, the R2 allele frequency distribution displayed slightly expressed latitudinal increase southwards. The DRD4 genotype distribution deviated from the equilibrium in most of the samples examined. In some samples, statistically significant increase of the R2/R2homozygotes frequency was demonstrated. One of the possible explanations of this phenomenon is assortative mating with respect to phenotypic (behavioral) allele manifestation. The data obtained can serve as the basis for the investigation of the possible role of the DRD4 alleles as the risk factors for the development of alcoholism and other types of addictions.

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N. K. Yankovsky

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Evgeny I. Rogaev

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Zh. M. Kozhekbaeva

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Ekaterina Sanina

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Maria Sokolova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Nick Yankovsky

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Vladimir Koshechkin

Peoples' Friendship University of Russia

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A. S. Gureev

Russian Academy of Sciences

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