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This book presents a long-term study in genetic isolates of
indigenous small ethnics of Dagestan, located in the North-East
part of Caucasus in Russia. Dagestan is characterized by extreme
cultural and linguistic differences in a small geographic area and
contains 26 indigenous ethnic groups. According to archeological
data these indigenous highland ethnics have been living in the same
area for more than ten thousand years. Our long-term
population-genetic study of Dagestan indigenous ethnic groups
indicates their close relation to each other and suggests that they
evolved from one common ancestral meta-population. Dagestan has an
extremely high genetic diversity between ethnic populations and a
low genetic diversity within them. Such genetic isolates are
exceptional resources for the detection of susceptibility genes for
complex diseases because of the reduction in genetic and clinical
heterogeneity. The founder effect and gene drift in these primary
isolates may have caused aggregation of specific haplotypes with
limited numbers of pathogenic alleles and loci in some isolates
relative to others. The book presents a study in four ethnically
and demographically diverse genetic isolates with aggregation of
schizophrenia that we ascertained within our Dagestan Genetic
Heritage Research Project. The results obtained support the notion
that mapping genes of any complex disease (e.g., schizophrenia) in
demographically older genetic isolates may be more time and cost
effective due to their high clinical and genetic homogeneity, in
comparison with demographically younger isolates, especially with
genetically heterogeneous outbred populations.
This book presents a long-term study in genetic isolates of
indigenous small ethnics of Dagestan, located in the North-East
part of Caucasus in Russia. Dagestan is characterized by extreme
cultural and linguistic differences in a small geographic area and
contains 26 indigenous ethnic groups. According to archeological
data these indigenous highland ethnics have been living in the same
area for more than ten thousand years. Our long-term
population-genetic study of Dagestan indigenous ethnic groups
indicates their close relation to each other and suggests that they
evolved from one common ancestral meta-population. Dagestan has an
extremely high genetic diversity between ethnic populations and a
low genetic diversity within them. Such genetic isolates are
exceptional resources for the detection of susceptibility genes for
complex diseases because of the reduction in genetic and clinical
heterogeneity. The founder effect and gene drift in these primary
isolates may have caused aggregation of specific haplotypes with
limited numbers of pathogenic alleles and loci in some isolates
relative to others. The book presents a study in four ethnically
and demographically diverse genetic isolates with aggregation of
schizophrenia that we ascertained within our Dagestan Genetic
Heritage Research Project. The results obtained support the notion
that mapping genes of any complex disease (e.g., schizophrenia) in
demographically older genetic isolates may be more time and cost
effective due to their high clinical and genetic homogeneity, in
comparison with demographically younger isolates, especially with
genetically heterogeneous outbred populations.
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