Artículo de revista
Whole Genome Sequence, Variant Discovery and Annotation in Mapuche-Huilliche Native South Americans
Fecha
2019Registro en:
Scientific Reports, Volumen 9, Issue 1, 2019,
20452322
10.1038/s41598-019-39391-z
Autor
Vidal, Elena A.
Moyano, Tomás C.
Bustos, Bernabé I.
Pérez-Palma, Eduardo
Moraga, Carol
Riveras, Eleodoro
Montecinos, Alejandro
Azócar, Lorena
Soto, Daniela C.
Vidal, Mabel
Di Genova, Alex
Puschel, Klaus
Nürnberg, Peter
Buch, Stephan
Hampe, Jochen
Allende,
Institución
Resumen
Whole human genome sequencing initiatives help us understand population history and the basis of genetic diseases. Current data mostly focuses on Old World populations, and the information of the genomic structure of Native Americans, especially those from the Southern Cone is scant. Here we present annotation and variant discovery from high-quality complete genome sequences of a cohort of 11 Mapuche-Huilliche individuals (HUI) from Southern Chile. We found approximately 3.1 × 10 6 single nucleotide variants (SNVs) per individual and identified 403,383 (6.9%) of novel SNVs events. Analyses of large-scale genomic events detected 680 copy number variants (CNVs) and 4,514 structural variants (SVs), including 398 and 1,910 novel events, respectively. Global ancestry composition of HUI genomes revealed that the cohort represents a sample from a marginally admixed population from the Southern Cone, whose main genetic component derives from Native American ancestors. Ad