Automatic landmarking identifies new loci associated with face morphology and implicates Neanderthal introgression in human nasal shape
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Published:2023-05-08
Issue:1
Volume:6
Page:
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ISSN:2399-3642
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Container-title:Communications Biology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Commun Biol
Author:
Li QingORCID, Chen Jieyi, Faux PierreORCID, Delgado Miguel Eduardo, Bonfante Betty, Fuentes-Guajardo Macarena, Mendoza-Revilla Javier, Chacón-Duque J. CamiloORCID, Hurtado Malena, Villegas Valeria, Granja Vanessa, Jaramillo Claudia, Arias WilliamORCID, Barquera RodrigoORCID, Everardo-Martínez Paola, Sánchez-Quinto Mirsha, Gómez-Valdés JorgeORCID, Villamil-Ramírez Hugo, Silva de Cerqueira Caio C., Hünemeier Tábita, Ramallo Virginia, Wu Sijie, Du SiyuanORCID, Giardina AndreaORCID, Paria Soumya Subhra, Khokan Mahfuzur Rahman, Gonzalez-José Rolando, Schüler-Faccini Lavinia, Bortolini Maria-Cátira, Acuña-Alonzo Victor, Canizales-Quinteros Samuel, Gallo Carla, Poletti Giovanni, Rojas Winston, Rothhammer Francisco, Navarro NicolasORCID, Wang SijiaORCID, Adhikari KaustubhORCID, Ruiz-Linares AndrésORCID
Abstract
AbstractWe report a genome-wide association study of facial features in >6000 Latin Americans based on automatic landmarking of 2D portraits and testing for association with inter-landmark distances. We detected significant associations (P-value <5 × 10−8) at 42 genome regions, nine of which have been previously reported. In follow-up analyses, 26 of the 33 novel regions replicate in East Asians, Europeans, or Africans, and one mouse homologous region influences craniofacial morphology in mice. The novel region in 1q32.3 shows introgression from Neanderthals and we find that the introgressed tract increases nasal height (consistent with the differentiation between Neanderthals and modern humans). Novel regions include candidate genes and genome regulatory elements previously implicated in craniofacial development, and show preferential transcription in cranial neural crest cells. The automated approach used here should simplify the collection of large study samples from across the world, facilitating a cosmopolitan characterization of the genetics of facial features.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Medicine (miscellaneous)
Reference97 articles.
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