Disease Gene Mapping Flashcards
What has made gene mapping in humans so difficult?
Inability to perform desired crosses and small number of progeny. This means research is restricted to analysing pedigrees with limited information.
Small offspring numbers.
What gene is found to be linked to nail-patella syndrome?
The ABO blood type gene
How can DNA markers be used?
They can help locate disease or other gene by linkage and physical location.
What are the advantages of DNA markers?
DNA markers are rapid (PCR and sequencing)
Microsatellite markers are multiallelic, SNVs are biallelic
No need to wait for phenotype expression.
Phenotypes are often hard to distinguish due to not being discrete charaters.
DNA markers allow distinction between homozygous and heterozygous.
DNA markers must be well spread out on all chromosomes to ensure that there are no gapsin chromosomes
Why is it important to know about variations?
Underlying phenotypic differences can be more well understood
They cause inherited diseases.
They allow tracking of ancestral human history
What is the goal of a genetic study?
Identification of genetic risk factors causing human complex disease (Type II diabetes, hypertension, asthma)
Common complex disease and rare single gene (Mendelian) disease
What evidence suggests that a disease or trait is genetic?
Twin studies (compare monozygotic to dizygotic twins)
Families segregation (Increased risk for disease among family members of an affected individual so frequency in first degree relatives is compared to frequency of disease in general population)
How are genes that are involved in complex disease phenotypes identified?
Functional cloning: Disease -> Function -> Gene -> Map
Positional cloning: Disease -> Map -> Gene -> Function
How are genes contributing to disease approached?
Candidates gene approach: Candidate genes are located in chromosome region suspected of being involved in the expression of disease traits. Can be identified by association and linkage with phenotypes.
Whole genome screen approach: Scanning whole genome without prior information, can discover potential genes playing roles for diseases.
What are the advantages and disadvantages of using positional cloning to identify a gene?
Strengths:
No need to know the gene products required
Very strong track record in single-gene disorders.
Weaknesses:
Understanding of function not a certain outcome
Poor track record with multifactorial effects.
How can gene mapping be used to identify disease phenotypes?
Marker genes located near the disease genotype are identified allowing the identification of traits that are linked to the genotype of the disease.
How are genes identified that contribute to disease?
Linkage mapping (Measures segregation of alleles and a phenotype within a family. Use crossover during meiosis II. (Genes that are physically close together are more likely to be inherited together)
Linkage disequilibrium (Evaluate evidence of correlation between marker allele and a disease risk allele)
What important gene was discovered by positional cloning?
1st gene responsible for human genetic disease discovered by positional cloning was cystic fibrosis. Geneticists attempted to identify the gene for CF and clones were isolated after linkage analysis found a region narrow enough.
How were clones from the cystic fibrosis region identified?
Via chromosome walking and jumping.
Analysis of DNA sequences within the clones revealed 4 candidate genes
Additional studies eliminated 3 of the candidate genes
DNA sequencing revealed presence of a 3-bp deletion in the gene of the CF patient
What is the recombination fraction?
The recombination fraction is the probability that in any meiosis there will be a recombination between them.
If θ=0.5 there is mendelian segregation and thus no linkage so recombination
If θ-0.0 there is very tight linkage and thus no recombination
What is required if there is a higher recombination fraction?
More meioses are needed to obtain evidence that 2 genes are linked. (eg. 0.40 requires 343 meioses minimum.
How is linkage mapping conducted?
Collect families with affected individuals
Genome scan - test markers evenly spaces across the entire genome.
Lod score (log of the odds) - What are the odds of observing the family marker data if the marker is linked to the disease (less recombination than expected) compared to if the marker is not linked to the disease.
What are the problems with mapping in humans? How is this solved?
Can’t do controlled crosses
Crosses equivalent to tet-cross are extremely rare
Humans produce a very small number of progeny.
Solution - Combine results of many identical matings.(Lod score)
How is the Lod score calculated?
2 probabilities calculated:
- First one assumes independent assortment
- Second one assumes a specific degree of linkage
Ratio (odds) of probabilities is calculated
Log of ratio is the Lod value
Repeat calculation for range of different degrees of linkage.