犹太人的药物遗传学。

Yao Yang, Inga Peter, Stuart A Scott
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引用次数: 17

摘要

2000多年来,犹太人口经历了漫长的迁徙、人口瓶颈、扩张和地理隔离的历史,形成了犹太人独特的遗传结构。因此,在几个犹太人群体中发现了许多孟德尔病基因和常染色体隐性疾病的创始突变,这促使最近在犹太人群体中对常见疾病易感性和其他复杂特征进行基因组研究。尽管在犹太人群体中很少有关于药物反应变异的遗传决定因素的研究报道,但已经发现了一些独特的药物遗传变异,这些变异在犹太人群体中比在其他主要种族群体中更常见。在德系犹太人(AJ)人群中发现的值得注意的例子包括维生素K环氧化物还原酶复合物亚基1 (VKORC1) c.106G>T (p.D36Y)变异与高华法林剂量需求相关,以及最近报道的细胞色素P450 2C19 (CYP2C19)等位基因CYP2C19*4B,其在同一单倍型上同时具有功能丧失[*4 (c.1A>G)]和功能增加[*17 (c.-806C>T)]变异。这些数据令人鼓舞,因为像其他种族和亚群体一样,犹太人群体可能拥有许多在其他较大的种族群体和民族中不常见或不存在的药物遗传变异。除了独特的变异外,在AJ和其他犹太人群中也发现了常见的关键药物代谢基因(如ABCB1、CYP2C8、CYP2C9、CYP2C19、CYP2D6、NAT2)的多民族变异。本文将对现有的药物遗传学文献进行综述,并对这一独特人群的相关研究方向进行讨论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Pharmacogenetics in Jewish populations.

Spanning over 2000 years, the Jewish population has a long history of migration, population bottlenecks, expansions, and geographical isolation, which has resulted in a unique genetic architecture among the Jewish people. As such, many Mendelian disease genes and founder mutations for autosomal recessive diseases have been discovered in several Jewish groups, which have prompted recent genomic studies in the Jewish population on common disease susceptibility and other complex traits. Although few studies on the genetic determinants of drug response variability have been reported in the Jewish population, a number of unique pharmacogenetic variants have been discovered that are more common in Jewish populations than in other major racial groups. Notable examples identified in the Ashkenazi Jewish (AJ) population include the vitamin K epoxide reductase complex subunit 1 (VKORC1) c.106G>T (p.D36Y) variant associated with high warfarin dosing requirements and the recently reported cytochrome P450 2C19 (CYP2C19) allele, CYP2C19*4B, that harbors both loss-of-function [*4 (c.1A>G)] and increased-function [*17 (c.-806C>T)] variants on the same haplotype. These data are encouraging in that like other ethnicities and subpopulations, the Jewish population likely harbors numerous pharmacogenetic variants that are uncommon or absent in other larger racial groups and ethnicities. In addition to unique variants, common multi-ethnic variants in key drug metabolism genes (e.g., ABCB1, CYP2C8, CYP2C9, CYP2C19, CYP2D6, NAT2) have also been detected in the AJ and other Jewish groups. This review aims to summarize the currently available pharmacogenetics literature and discuss future directions for related research with this unique population.

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