Gene/Protein
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Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
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Query: UMLS:C0004135 (
ATM
)
13,001
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
One of the many potential uses of the HapMap project is its application to the investigation of complex disease aetiology among a wide range of populations. This study aims to assess the transferability of HapMap SNP data to the Spanish population in the context of cancer research. We have carried out a genotyping study in Spanish subjects involving 175 candidate cancer genes using an indirect gene-based approach and compared results with those for HapMap CEU subjects. Allele frequencies were very consistent between the two samples, with a high positive correlation (R) of 0.91 (P<<1x10(-6)). Linkage disequilibrium patterns and block structures across each gene were also very similar, with disequilibrium coefficient (r (2)) highly correlated (R=0.95, P<<1x10(-6)). We found that of the 21 genes that contained at least one block larger than 60 kb, nine (
ATM
, ATR, BRCA1, ERCC6, FANCC, RAD17, RAD50,
RAD54B
and XRCC4) belonged to the GO category "DNA repair". Haplotype frequencies per gene were also highly correlated (mean R=0.93), as was haplotype diversity (R=0.91, P<<1x10(-6)). "Yin yang" haplotypes were observed for 43% of the genes analysed and 18% of those were identical to the ancestral haplotype (identified in Chimpazee). Finally, the portability of tagSNPs identified in the HapMap CEU data using pairwise r (2) thresholds of 0.8 and 0.5 was assessed by applying these to the Spanish and current HapMap data for 66 genes. In general, the HapMap tagSNPs performed very well. Our results show generally high concordance with HapMap data in allele frequencies and haplotype distributions and confirm the applicability of HapMap SNP data to the study of complex diseases among the Spanish population.
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PMID:Evaluating HapMap SNP data transferability in a large-scale genotyping project involving 175 cancer-associated genes. 1632 10
The average length of linkage disequilibrium (LD) blocks in European populations is about 22 kb. In this study, we have selected 20 genes with LD blocks larger than 60 kb (with a median length of 88 kb) from a total of 121 cancer-related genes. We observed limited haplotype diversity, with an average of three haplotypes per gene accounting for more than 90% of the diversity, two of these being a Yin-Yang pair in 95% of the LD blocks. The mean frequency of the most common haplotype in the Spanish population was just below 50%, similar to those for the HapMap CEU and African samples, but lower than the 60% observed in Asian samples. Genes involved in the regulation of nucleobases and nucleic acid metabolism were overrepresented among these 20 genes with long LD blocks (eight genes
ATM
, BRCA1, BRCA2, ERCC6, MLH1, MSH3,
RAD54B
and XRCC4) relative to the other 101 cancer-related genes studied (P=1.23 x 10(-6)). The ancestral haplotype was observed at a frequency greater than 3 in 67% of the genes either in the Spanish or one of the HapMap sampled populations. When observed, the ancestral haplotype had an average 15% frequency in the Spanish sample, less than half that observed in Asian and African samples. The Spanish Yin-Yang haplotype pair represented over 35% of haplotypes in African samples and over 65% in non-African samples. We detected differences in SNP frequencies between populations for five genes (ALDH2, APC, PIK3CB, RB1 and XRCC4, all with Fst>0.4); however, these genes did not show evidence of positive selection. Finally, we found no evidence that the haplotypes formed by SNPs in the 20 genes are associated with breast cancer.
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PMID:Haplotype patterns in cancer-related genes with long-range linkage disequilibrium: no evidence of association with breast cancer or positive selection. 1800 May 25