Ancestry Flashcards

1
Q

Story of the human genome (Dunstan)

A

The story of the human genome is an African one

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2
Q

Human migration + alleles

A

Human migration carried subsets of geentic diveristy to new locations – each popultons established difefrent frequncies (sometimes popultions will aquire novel variations)

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3
Q

Novel variations

A

Sometimes popultions will aquire novel variations

Human mutation rate – 0.5 X 10^-9 per BP per meiosis

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4
Q

Allele freuqncies between popupultions

A

Subset of allles left popultion and founded new popultions –> As each popultion is established there is a different frequencey of allles in each popultion
- All alleles are still founded in Afirca (because we came from there) but in different frequnceies

DIFFERENT HUMAN POPULTIONS HAVE DIFFERENT ALLELE FREQUCNIES

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5
Q

What do genetic tests use

A

Direct to consumer genetic testing companies take advantage of popultion level allele frequnecies to guess your gentic testing

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6
Q

Guess in Genetic tests

A

It is a statistical assemnet – NOT guarentee

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7
Q

What do companies offer

A
  1. Ancestry reports
  2. Genotype to phenotype predictions
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8
Q

Ancestory reports of genetic testing

A

Detemrines the percentage of DNA that orginated from different popultions
- What percent of DNA is from what part of the world

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9
Q

Genotype to phenotyoe predictions in genetic tests

A

Calculate Disease risks

Predict drug repsonses

Predicts ‘fun’ phenotypes (Bitter taste + earwax type + freckling + height)

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10
Q

What do genetic testing companies sequence

A

They do not sequence genomes –> since only 0.1% of our genome is varaible –> DTC companies save money by only genotyping SNPs
- Why sequncey all that would be the same –> only look at varaible resghions
- Look at SNPs across genome
- Look at all Autosomes + sex chromsomes

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11
Q

Variability in genome

A

Only 0.1% of our genome are varaible

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12
Q

What do testing companies look for

A

You only see what you are looking for –> novel mutations will not be identified
- You won’t see mutations that are not the SNPs looking at

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13
Q

How do companies test DNA?

A
  • ssDNA containing specific SNP variants are bound to
    a glass slide (a microarray)
  • sample DNA is isolated, fragmented and
    fluorescently labeled and applied over the entire
    slide.
  • Sample DNA fragments bind to complementary
    sequences.
  • Hybridization efficiencies determined by
    fluorescence intensities.
  • The higher the fluorescence, the higher the
    probability that the sample DNA matches the snp on
    the array

MINE:
DNA –> Chop up DNA –> Put florucent tag –> put on array – on that array you have DNA on chip –> if the DNA match = DNA binds and get flourecence

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14
Q
A
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15
Q
A

Issue = not 100% certain – they all have high percent of C

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16
Q

Haplotype

A

A set of SNPs found on the same chromosome

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17
Q

Power in genetic testing

A

Power = not looking at one SNP but looking at set of SNPs

18
Q

BP between SNP

A

There might be 100s or 1000s of BP between each SNP

19
Q

How many Haplotypes do we have

A

We are diploid so each of us have 2 haplotyoes for any streatch of DNA

20
Q
A

P(AT)popA = P(A at SNP1) AND P(T at SNP2)
0.15 X 0.55

P(AT)popB = P(A at SNP 1 in B) AND P(T at SNP 2 in B)

21
Q

Admixture

A

Occurs when previously diverged or isolated genetic lineages mix

Many of us are admixtures

22
Q

Most ancestries

A

Many of us have complicated ancestries and recombinant genomes

23
Q

Fruimera Case Study

A

Great Grandparents – 100% finish

Dad = 50% Finish

She should be 25% finish

The company = predicted that she had finnish ancestry and what region of Finland her ancestry was most likley from

24
Q

Haplogroup painting

A

Shows where regions of each chrosmome is from

Shows that crossover occurs because not full chromsome is finish form dad = means that part of the chromsomes had recombination (if no recombination would have full finsih on chromsome – dad had one full finsh chromsome and one full not finsh chromsome –> one of his non-finsih chromsomes crossed over with finish chromsome)

25
Q

Ancetsry anlysis chnaging

A

You can do ancestry anlysis two times from the same company and get two different results
- Issue = admixture

  1. Haplotype chnages – how do you find breaking point of crossover
  2. Designing algrothsm to predict ancestry is challenging – two chromsomes can have two of the same sequnce at as non recombinatrion

Algorthism is hard – uodate them to find breaking point – uopdate them as they get more data

the DNA doesn’t chnage teh computer software does (reaosn why results can chnage)

26
Q

Testing algorthm

A

Algorthism is hard – uodate them to find breaking point – uopdate them as they get more data

the DNA doesn’t chnage teh computer software does (reaosn why results can chnage)

27
Q

Probability of crossover vs no crossover

A

Have a lower proabbility with recombination = won’t know haplotype is broken
- hard to know if sequence is due to crossover or not (can have the same sequnce)

add in slide 39

28
Q

How to define a haplotype

A
  1. What are the paternal and maternal alleles
  2. How long is the haplotype
29
Q

Building Ancestry Algortithms

A

Ancestry predictions are
built from training sets of
individuals from known
populations to build
predictive algorithms

30
Q

Ancestry predictions chnaging

A
  1. As training sets and algorithms change, ancestry predictions will change
  2. Different companies use different SNPs + Different training sets + Different algorthisms

You will likley get difefrent ancestry results from difefrent DTC companies

31
Q

Why does Fruimera and brother have difefrent amounts of finnish

A

You would think that they should both be 25% finnish –> Are the not the same because during meiosis get random gamates that are all different

Dad = has 1 finish and 1 non-finnish chromsosomes –> fruimera has less of teh finish chromsomes and the brotehr has more because of recombination

SLIDES
* You received half your DNA from
one parent.
* The egg or sperm that created
you will have different
proportions of your parents
maternal and paternal
chromosomes.
* On average, gametes have equal
percentages of maternal and
paternal chromosomes.

32
Q

Amount of Ancestral DNA each generation

A

The amount of ancestral DNA approximatley halves each generation BUT this can vary depending on the exact compistion in a gamete

After 7 generations less than 1% of ancestral DNA is expected BUT ancestral DNA can be lost at earlier generations

33
Q

Ancestry vs. Ethinicity vs. race

A

All different

Ancestry – genetic lineage group – has biologic definition

Ethnicity – shared cultural origins

Race – Shared physical + cultural + Social charachtersitics – has no biologic definition

34
Q

Complex trait example

A

Example – height – height is controlled by many diferent genes

Tall varaint = found all over the world –> can have a popultion with higher frequncey of tall but there is no region that only has tall
- tall gene os not ONLY found in any one popultion – found in all popultions

35
Q

Variants in diferent popultions

A

Tall varaint = found all over the world –> can have a popultion with higher frequncey of tall but there is no region that only has tall
- tall gene os not ONLY found in any one popultion – found in all popultions

DNA for vraaints for tall = found all around the world –> certain regions might have more vraints than other regions BUT these vrainats are not exculsive to any one region (can be found more in one popultion but is still found in all popultions)

36
Q

Unique varaints

A

Theer are popultions with unique varaints BUT not everyone in that popultion will have that unique varaint

Genetic varaints that are unique to a popultion cannot be used to define all people in that popultion –> not eveyrone in popultion will have that varaint

37
Q

Race + biology

A

Race is real BUT is not genetically supported

38
Q

Genes + Skin color

A

At least 6 genes with “main effects” are known to contribute to skin color
and many “modifier” and “epistatic” genes
- get continium of color

There is no magic number or combination of alleles that determines whther someone is perceived or idetofies as black, white etc.

39
Q

DNA varaints for dark skin

A

The DNA variants for light or dark skin be found all around the world. Certain regions of the world might have more genetic variants for
dark skin than other regions, but these variants are not exclusive to any one region
- Found in all popultions – not exckusive to 1 popultions –> can’t define skin color based on genetic ancestry

40
Q

DNA + continenets

A

No DNA variants have been found that can unambiguously divide people into continental populations.

41
Q

Ex. Of race + biology

A

Race is real BUT not genetically support

Ex. Fraternal twins – one is white and one is black

42
Q

Genetic Variation across popultions

A

Nearly all of the genetic variation found in European Populations is found in Asian populations.

All of the genetic variation found in Euro and Asian population is found in African populations