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MYH9 is associated with nondiabetic end-stage renal disease in African Americans

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TLDR
Multiple common SNPs in the gene encoding nonmuscle myosin heavy chain type II isoform A (MYH9) were associated with two to four times greater risk of nondiabetic E SRD and accounted for a large proportion of the excess risk of ESRD observed in African compared to European Americans.
Abstract
Linda Kao and colleagues use admixture mapping to identify risk variants in MYH9 associated with nondiabetic end-stage renal disease in African Americans. The risk variants are more common in populations with West African ancestry and contribute to the excess burden of end-stage kidney diseases in these populations. A similar finding is reported in an accompanying paper by Cheryl Winkler and colleagues. As end-stage renal disease (ESRD) has a four times higher incidence in African Americans compared to European Americans, we hypothesized that susceptibility alleles for ESRD have a higher frequency in the West African than the European gene pool. We carried out a genome-wide admixture scan in 1,372 ESRD cases and 806 controls and found a highly significant association between excess African ancestry and nondiabetic ESRD (lod score = 5.70) but not diabetic ESRD (lod = 0.47) on chromosome 22q12. Each copy of the European ancestral allele conferred a relative risk of 0.50 (95% CI = 0.39–0.63) compared to African ancestry. Multiple common SNPs (allele frequencies ranging from 0.2 to 0.6) in the gene encoding nonmuscle myosin heavy chain type II isoform A (MYH9) were associated with two to four times greater risk of nondiabetic ESRD and accounted for a large proportion of the excess risk of ESRD observed in African compared to European Americans.

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Chronic kidney disease: global dimension and perspectives

TL;DR: Screening and intervention can prevent chronic kidney disease, and where management strategies have been implemented the incidence of end-stage kidney disease has been reduced, but awareness of the disorder remains low in many communities and among many physicians.
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A genome-wide association search for type 2 diabetes genes in African Americans.

Nichole D. Palmer, +384 more
- 04 Jan 2012 - 
TL;DR: It is suggested that multiple loci underlie T2DM susceptibility in the African-American population and that these loci are distinct from those identified in other ethnic populations.

Association of Trypanolytic ApoL1 Variants with Kidney Disease in

TL;DR: In African Americans, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis and hypertension-attributed end-stage kidney disease (H-ESKD) are associated with two independent sequence variants in the APOL1 gene on chromosome 22, which speculate that evolution of a critical survival factor in Africa may have contributed to the high rates of renal disease in African Americans.
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Evolving importance of kidney disease: from subspecialty to global health burden

TL;DR: Strong, graded, and consistent associations exist between clinical prognosis and two hallmarks of chronic kidney disease: reduced glomerular filtration rate and increased urinary albumin excretion.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Whole-Genome Patterns of Common DNA Variation in Three Human Populations

TL;DR: This work has characterized whole-genome patterns of common human DNA variation by genotyping 1,586,383 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 71 Americans of European, African, and Asian ancestry and indicates that these SNPs capture most common genetic variation as a result of linkage disequilibrium.
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