Project description:Peruvian Native American individuals were genotyped as part of the Peruvian Genome Project (PGP). This data was used to infer population structure, demographic history and natural selection. We addressed question about gene flow across the Andes and Natural Selection in Andes and Amazon
Project description:Using genome-wide information of Native Americans from Andes and Amazon we addressed questions about : the Andes-Amazon dichotomy, the Andean homogenization and how cultural and socioeconomic interactions revealed by archaeology were accompanied by gene flow, specifically in northern Peru. Moreover, this demographic history allowed for cases of positive natural selection in the high and arid Andes vs. the low Amazon tropical forest
Project description:Hispanic/Latino populations possess a complex genetic structure that reflects recent admixture among and potentially ancient substructure within Native American, European, and West African source populations. Here, we quantify genome-wide patterns of SNP and haplotype variation among 100 individuals with ancestry from Ecuador, Colombia, Puerto Rico, and the Dominican Republic genotyped using Illumina technology.
Project description:Background: Bothrops atrox is known to be the pitviper responsible for most snakebites and human fatalities in the Amazon region. It can be found in a wide geographical area including the northern South America, the east of Andes and the Amazon basin. Possibly due to its wide distribution range and generalist feeding, intraspecific venom variation was reported by previous proteomics studies. Sex-based and ontogenetic variations on venom compositions of Bothrops snakes were also subject of proteomic and peptidomic analysis. However, the venom peptidome of B. atrox remains unknown. Methods: we conducted a mass spectrometry-based analysis of the venom peptides of individual male and female specimens combining bottom-up and top-down approaches. Results: We identified in B. atrox a total of 105 native peptides in the mass range of 0.4 to 13.9 kDa. Quantitative analysis showed that Phospholipase A2 and Bradykinin Potentiating Peptides were the most abundant peptide families in both genders, but the disintegrins levels were significantly increased in the venoms of females. Known peptides processed at non-canonical sites and new peptides were also revealed in this work. Conclusion: The venom peptidomes of male and female specimens of B. atrox were analyzed by mass spectrometry-based approaches in this work. The study points to differences in the disintegrin levels in the venoms of females that may result in distinct pathophysiology in envenomation. Further research is needed to explore its biological implications.
Project description:In this study, genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data (Illumina Infinium® MEGA array) was gathered for 200 individuals distributed across Perú, and then analyzed to investigate signals of recent positive selection specific to populations living in the high-altitude environments of the Andes, the arid Pacific coast and the Amazon rainforest.
Project description:Gene expression profiles of paired normal adjacent mucosa and tumor samples from 98 individuals and 50 healthy colon mucosae, were obtained through Affymetrix Human Genome U219 Arrays. This dataset is in the context of the COLONOMICS project and to query additional information you can visit the project website www.colonomics.org.