National genomic projects in Asia and Africa: a review
摘要
National genome projects (NGPs) are increasingly shaping precision medicine by improving representation of population-specific genetic diversity. This review compiles findings from NGPs across Asia and Africa, regions that remain underrepresented in global genomic databases despite their extensive demographic and genetic diversity. A total of 53 studies from 24 countries were identified to understand (1) the genomic approach utilized, (2) novel findings that have emerged, and (3) strategies for improving research in these regions. The NGPs implement population-based variome databases (20 NGPs), linear reference genome assemblies (8 NGPs), and graph-based pangenome assemblies (1 NGP). Novel variants ranged between 0.28% (China) and 19.6% (Iran), whereas rare variants accounted for up to 88.9% of the detected variants in the Chinese population. Each NGP documents its country’s evolutionary and migration history, which impacts disease frequency and pharmacogenomic variants. Clinically, NGPs revealed strong population stratification in disease-associated and pharmacogenomic variants. For example, the GJB2 rs72474224 hearing-loss variant ranged from 13% in Vietnam and 12% in Hong Kong to 0.0894% in Turkey, while the VKORC1 rs9923231 pharmacogenomic variant reached 89.2% in Taiwan but was 20%–25% in European-related Russian subpopulations. These findings demonstrate that clinically relevant allele frequencies, pathogenicity assessments, and drug-response markers differ substantially across ancestries. This review highlights ongoing efforts and strategies to enhance the representativeness of genomic data through NGPs in Asia and Africa. We also suggest future directions for national projects, including integrating family-based studies, multi-omic data, and standardized pipelines to accelerate discovery and support the equitable implementation of precision medicine.