Genetic diversity is a predictor of mortality in humans
Author
De Jager, Philip L.
Uitterlinden, Andre
Homuth, Georg
Lorbeer, Roberto
Grabe, Hans J.
Launer, Lenore
Murabito, Joanne M.
Singleton, Andrew B.
Bihlmeyer, Nathan A.
Brody, Jennifer A.
Smith, Albert Vernon
Lunetta, Kathryn L.
Nalls, Mike
Smith, Jennifer A.
Tanaka, Toshiko
Davies, Gail
Yu, Lei
Mirza, Saira Saeed
Teumer, Alexander
Coresh, Josef
Pankow, James S.
Franceschini, Nora
Scaria, Anish
Oshima, Junko
Psaty, Bruce M.
Gudnason, Vilmundur
Weir, David R.
Bandinelli, Stefania
Deary, Ian J.
Bennett, David A.
Tiemeier, Henning
Kocher, Thomas
Lumley, Thomas
Arking, Dan E.
Eiriksdottir, Gudny
Harris, Tamara B.
Li, Hanyue
Karasik, David
Kiel, Douglas P.
Garcia, Melissa
Liu, Yongmei
Faul, Jessica D.
Kardia, Sharon L. R.
Zhao, Wei
Ferrucci, Luigi
Allerhand, Michael
Liewald, David C.
Redmond, Paul
Starr, John M.
Evans, Denis A.
Direk, Neşe
Ikram, Mohammed Arfan
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Background: It has been well-established, both by population genetics theory and direct observation in many organisms, that increased genetic diversity provides a survival advantage. However, given the limitations of both sample size and genome-wide metrics, this hypothesis has not been comprehensively tested in human populations. Moreover, the presence of numerous segregating small effect alleles that influence traits that directly impact health directly raises the question as to whether global measures of genomic variation are themselves associated with human health and disease.
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