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Published byLiane Jaeger Modified over 6 years ago
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Introduction to bioinformatics lecture 11 SNP by Ms.Shumaila Azam
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Human Genome and SNPs Now that the human genome is (mostly) sequenced, attention turning to the evaluation of variation Alterations in DNA involving a single base pair are called single nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs Map of ~1.4 million SNPs It is estimated that ~60,000 SNPs occur within exons;
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Goals of SNP Initiatives
Immediate goals: The hundreds of thousands of SNPs estimated to be present in the human genome Interest also in other organisms, e.g. potatoes(!) Establishment of SNP Database(s)
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Longer term goals: Areas of SNP Application
Gene discovery and mapping Diagnostics/risk profiling Response prediction Gene function identification
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Polymorphism Technical definition: most common variant (allele) occurs with less than 99% frequency in the population Also used as a general term for variation Many types of DNA polymorphisms, including RFLPs, VNTRs, microsatellites ‘Highly polymorphic’ = many variants
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Use of Polymorphism in Gene Mapping
1980s – RFLP marker maps 1990s – microsatellite marker maps
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Gene Discovery and Mapping
Linkage Analysis Within-family associations between marker Linkage Disequilibrium (LD) Across-family associations
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Crossing over and Recombination
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Disease-Marker Association
A marker locus is associated with a disease if the distribution of genotypes at the marker locus in disease-affected individuals differs from the distribution in the general population A specific allele may be positively associated (over-represented in affecteds) or negatively associated (under-represented)
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Examples: Alzheimer’s
E4 present E4 absent Patients 58 33 Controls 16 55 The E4 allele appears to be positively associated with Alzheimer’s disease: Odds Ratio = (58/16)/(33/55) = 6
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Linkage Mutation occurs Allele D is created Nearby marker
Allele M was nearby D and M subsequently transmitted together
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Candidate Polymorphism Testing
Large SNP collections may allow testing for direct, physiologically relevant associations with trait
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Diagnostics/Risk Profiling
Identified SNP associations can potentially be used to develop diagnostic tools
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Response Prediction Pharmaceutical companies especially interested in this: Aim to identify those likely to respond Predict toxicity reactions in susceptible individuals Response to any kind of substance; creation of ‘functional foods’
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Gene Function Identification
Alternative to other experimental procedures (e.g. knock-outs, which cannot be used in humans) Studies to compare individuals with and without naturally occurring disease predisposing genetic profiles
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