Evaluating the accuracy of AIM panels at quantifying genome ancestry
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Fecha de publicación
2014Título de revista
BMC GENOMICS
Tipo de contenido
Artigo
DeCS
Genoma Humano | Técnicas de Genotipaje | Proyecto Mapa de Haplotipos | Técnicas de Genotipaje | Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple | Análisis de Componente PrincipalMeSH
Genome, Human | Genotyping Techniques | HapMap Project | Genotyping Techniques | Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide | Principal Component AnalysisResumen
Background: There is a growing interest among geneticists in developing panels of Ancestry Informative Markers (AIMs) aimed at measuring the biogeographical ancestry of individual genomes. The efficiency of these panels is commonly tested empirically by contrasting self-reported ancestry with the ancestry estimated from these panels.
Results: Using SNP data from HapMap we carried out a simulation-based study aimed at measuring the effect of SNP coverage on the estimation of genome ancestry. For three of the main continental groups (Africans, East Asians, Europeans) ancestry was first estimated using the whole HapMap SNP database as a proxy for global genome ancestry; these estimates were subsequently compared to those obtained from pre-designed AIM panels. Panels that consider >400 AIMs capture genome ancestry reasonably well, while those containing a few dozen AIMs show a large variability in ancestry estimates. Curiously, 500-1,000 SNPs selected at random from the genome provide an unbiased estimate of genome ancestry and perform as well as any AIM panel of similar size. In simulated scenarios of population admixture, panels containing few AIMs also show important deficiencies to measure genome ancestry.
Conclusions: The results indicate that the ability to estimate genome ancestry is strongly dependent on the number of AIMs used, and not primarily on their individual informativeness. Caution should be taken when making individual (medical, forensic, or anthropological) inferences based on AIMs.