Lecture 13 Flashcards

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1
Q

What are direct-to-consumer genotyping companies?

A
  • Customer provides cheek swab or spit sample
  • Company genotypes customer using a SNP array e.g. the Illumina or Affymetrix chips used in HapMap, 1000 Genomes, etc. type projects
  • Company provides a report on ancestry, possible relatives or health-related topic
  • Company sometimes uses (anonymised) data for research
  • Customer also obtains data as text file – they can choose to share this (anonymously or otherwise)
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2
Q

Uptake of Direct-To-Consumer companies

A

2020: 23andMe report 12 million people tested; Ancestry DNA even more customers

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3
Q

23andMe

A
  • Founded in 2006
  • 12 million customers
  • Sometimes difficult relationship with US FDA (Food and Drug Administration)
  • Valued at $US3.5 billion
  • Initial aim- tell people if they were more likely to get genetic disorders and reduce the risk in that through lifestyle changes - data given is accurate, the interpretation isn’t accurate
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4
Q

How do Health Tests work? (literature based)

A
  • Company (e.g. 23andMe) continue to monitor results of published GWAS studies on all diseases, traits, etc
  • They use the same SNP chips used in most GWAS studies- relies on the information the customer provides in the first place
  • They calculate an individual’s risk/carrier status etc, based on the customer’s genotype at the significant GWAS SNPs

Own research
- Customers complete questionnaires on variety of traits
- As database grows (to become bigger than published studies), 23andMe perform their own GWAS

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5
Q

How do health tests work? (own research)

A
  • Customers complete questionnaires on variety of traits
  • As database grows (to become bigger than published studies), 23andMe perform their own GWAS
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6
Q

23andMe Health Tests

A

Health and ancestry service - and risk of getting genetic disorders

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7
Q

Example of 23&Me data being used in research

A

Now a massive data set- tends to use the same SNP chips - have collaborated to increase sample size - trying to find alleles associated with traits

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8
Q

Ancestry

A
  • Company compares your SNP genotypes to those of reference populations
  • They try to predict the populations your ancestors came from (methods not usually published)
  • Marketed at people interested in family trees, genealogy, etc
    -Large customer base of people sharing family trees, extended to DNA testing
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9
Q

AncestryDNA- example report

A

Example report

This person has ancestry from Western Europe and Mexican native Americans…

… and small proportions of ancestry from many other places?

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10
Q

What does chromosome painting show

A

shows which genomic regions come from which populations

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11
Q

Genetic astrology?

A

The same person can get different reports from different companies…..or even from the same company!

Depends on:

  • Algorithm used
  • Reference populations used
  • How reference populations are labelled
  • shouldn’t interpret these tests too literally
  • Reflecting migratory events that have happened thousands of years ago - not telling us about our recent past and for example not where our grandparents are from
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12
Q

What is pedigree collapse

A

Our ancestry links back to the same person via many routes. Therefore, we have far fewer ancestors than 2n when we go back n generations

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13
Q

Whats the modelling approach for pedigree collapse

A
  • Predicts that most recent common ancestor of all living humans lived just ~3500 years ago
  • Going back a bit further (~7500 years ago), everybody alive was either an ancestor of all living humans or no living humans- ancestry comes from relatively few people due to only a number of finite possibilities
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14
Q

But most of our ancestors have not contributed to our genome- what does this mean?

A
  • During meiosis, there are an average of just 33 recombinations across all 23 chromosomes
  • We inherit large blocks of chromosome together
  • In this cartoon, the green, pink and grey great-grandparental chromosomes have not been passed to the granddaughter
  • Has some parts from the grandparents that are completely missing - so can have ancestors that haven’t contributed anything to your genome
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15
Q

Identifying relatives through DNA matches

A
  • If databases are large enough, there is a high chance that somebody submitting a sample can find distant relatives e.g. 3rd or 4th cousins
  • This is why AncestryDNA appeals to family tree enthusiasts
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16
Q

What was the golden state killer

A

The ‘Golden State Killer’

  • Between 1974-1986 at least 13 murders, >50 rapes, >100 burglaries during 3 separate sprees across different parts of California
  • No clear suspect
  • In ~2002 crime scene DNA compared to prisoners on Death Row, in case perpetrator has subsequently been arrested for other crimes. No match
  • In Jan 2018 crime scene sample was submitted to GEDMatch
17
Q

What is Gedmatch

A
  • GEDmatch is free software where DTC customers can upload their genotypes to try and identify relatives
  • Killer’s DNA had no close relatives but 10-20 possible 3rd or 4th cousins on GEDmatch
17
Q

Using genealogy to trace the killer

A
  • Built a large family tree (using birth records, marriage certificates, death records etc), that linked the third cousins to all of their relatives
  • Two people were identified that could be the killer – one of them (deceased) ruled out when a close family member provided DNA that was unrelated to crime scene sample
  • April 2018: Other suspect - Police surreptitiously took swab from car door handle and from tissue in a bin. Perfect match to crime scene sample
  • April 24th 2018 – police arrested Joseph James D’Angelo (then aged 72). Former policeman who lived in the areas where the crimes took place. Court case expected to last 10 years.
  • March 2020 – offered to plead guilty if death penalty threat removed. State prosecutors declined.
  • August 2020 – life sentence with no parole, as part of plea bargain. Admitted to additional crimes.
17
Q

Solving cold cases via distant relatives

A
  • Since Golden State Killer, same technique used in other historical serious crime cases
  • SNP chips mean we can distinguish between non-relatives and distant relatives
  • Therefore, criminals can be identified because distant relatives, who they have probably never met, have uploaded their data to databases like GEDmatch
  • Power to identify criminals will increase as databases grow
  • Not all companies allow their data to be used in this way