Research Reveals Genetic Variation Unique to Those of African Decent

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Researchers have found a genetic variation unique to some people of African descent that can add about six pounds of extra weight. About one percent of people of African heritage carry the genetic variation, the team at the National Institutes of Health reported. And those who have it are more likely to be obese: more than 55 percent of people with the mutation were obese, compared to 23 percent of those who don’t have it.

People of purely European descent don’t have this variation, the team reported in the journal. “By studying people of West Africa, the ancestral home of most African-Americans, and replicating our results in a large group of African-Americans, we are providing new insights into biological pathways for obesity that have not been previously explored,” said Ayo Doumatey of the National Human Genome Research Institute, part of the NIH.

The team started with 1,500 people taking part in a diabetes study in Nigeria, Ghana, and Kenya. They did what’s called a genome-wide association study, sequencing all their DNA. They found the mutation in a gene called SEMA4D. It’s associated with inflammation and while most people in the world don’t have mutations in the gene, 1 percent of the West Africans did.

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