C6 Searching for genetic clues Flashcards

1
Q

What does genetics offer

A
  • Risk prediction
  • Better prevention
  • Novel treatment
  • Personalised treatment
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2
Q

Contemporary strategies to search for genetic basis of CVD

A
  1. Genome-wide mapping
    • Searching across genome for points associated with CV disease
  2. Fine-mapping
    • Focus on a particular area → using a more dense marker to pinpoint where signal is coming from (~1000-10000bp)
  3. Identification of functional candidate alleles
    • (Few thousand bp) → range of variance within sequence associated with CV disease
  4. Testing of candidate alleles in living systems
    • Molecular biology state → to physiological state
    • From in vitro to in vivo (effects may not translate)
  5. Contribution by candidate alleles to phenotype variation
    • How much it contributes to the overall CV condition (It usually has polygenic involvement)
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3
Q

Contemporary tools used

A
  1. Linkage mapping (in families)
  2. LD (linkage disequilibrium) mapping (in broad population)
  3. Transcriptomics
  4. Proteomics
  5. Computational biology
    • Recognises pattern and sequences in genetic data
  6. Systems biology (physiology)
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4
Q

The human genome

A
  • 2.85billion nucleotides
  • 20-25k genes (make up 2% of genome)
  • Rest 98% compromises of:
    • non-coding DNA & RNA
    • Segmental duplication/deletion
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5
Q

Genome variation

A
  • Changes in protein function (involved in coding regions)
  • Changes in RNA expression (involved in non-coding regions)
    • Due to:
      • Genes
      • Non-coding RNA (orchestrates the biological rhythms that we experience)
      • Epigenetic marks (from env factors)
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6
Q

Genome maps

A
  • Most common maps used involves lots of markers - some in LD with causative variants
    • Represent variants found in our population
    • Average bp differences b/w people, 1/1000bp differs
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7
Q

What is linkage disequilibrium (LD)

A
  • The marker and the cause of variance is co-inherited
  • Likelihood of separation of marker & cause of variant during linkage is low
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8
Q

What is the most common DNA variant

A
  • SNPs are the most common DNA variants
    • Average frequency of transition (mutation) of bp ~11%
    • ~12 SNP per gene
      • 6 will be in coding regions, 3 will be altering protein sequence (non-synonymous)
      • 6 in perigenetic region → cause changes in gene expression of splicing
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9
Q

What is association analysis

A
  • Compare groups of interest in populations rather than restricted in families
  • Allows comparison of diseases which are not discretely black or white (i.e. able to compare hypertension)
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10
Q

What is missing heritability?

A
  • All genes found accounts for only 5% of heritability
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11
Q

What may the missing heritability be due to?

A
  • Gene-gene interaction (epistasis)
    • When genes interact → may have addition/synergistic effects
  • Gene-env interaction (epigenetics)
  • Rare coding variants
    • May be missed when using SNPs GWAS for analysis
  • Inflated heritability
    • Heritability is taken at a snapshot → Does not take into account the env which may change over time
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12
Q

Ancient mutation

A
  • Ancient mutation → From the top of the chain of the ancestory
    • everyone will have the variant
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13
Q

Modern mutation

A
  • Modern mutation → only that specific portion of people will have that variant (localised, infrequent)
    • Problem → difference in genetic marker may be mistaken for heritability of BP (but in reality, that pop may just have a high salt diet) → causes inflated heritability
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14
Q

Are genetic markers the only solution?

A
  • If we can find the physiological basis for these causes → we can target the diseases without the genetic markers
  • By targeting that, you target a much larger range of causes in one go
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