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Loss of ACTN3 gene function alters mouse muscle metabolism and shows evidence of positive selection in humans
Daniel MacArthur et al.
Nat Genet, published online 09 Sep 2007
Kathryn North (University of Sydney): More than a billion humans worldwide are predicted to be completely deficient in the fast skeletal muscle fiber protein alpha-actinin-3 owing to homozygosity for a premature stop codon polymorphism, R577X, in the ACTN3 gene. The R577X polymorphism is associated with elite athlete status and human muscle performance, suggesting that alpha-actinin-3 deficiency influences the function of fast muscle fibers. Here we show that loss of alpha-actinin-3 expression in a knockout mouse model results in a shift in muscle metabolism toward the more efficient aerobic pathway and an increase in intrinsic endurance performance. In addition, we demonstrate that the genomic region surrounding the 577X null allele shows low levels of genetic variation and recombination in individuals of European and East Asian descent, consistent with strong, recent positive selection. We propose that the 577X allele has been positively selected in some human populations owing to its effect on skeletal muscle metabolism.
 
Variations in DNA elucidate molecular networks that cause disease
Yanqing Chen et al.
Nature 452 (7186), 429-35 (27 Mar 2008)
Eric Schadt (Rosetta Inpharmatics): Here we develop an alternative to the classic forward genetics approach for dissecting complex disease traits where, instead of identifying susceptibility genes directly affected by variations in DNA, we identify gene networks that are perturbed by susceptibility loci and that in turn lead to disease. Application of this method to liver and adipose gene expression data generated from a segregating mouse population results in the identification of a macrophage-enriched network supported as having a causal relationship with disease traits associated with metabolic syndrome. Three genes in this network, lipoprotein lipase (Lpl), lactamase beta (Lactb) and protein phosphatase 1-like (Ppm1l), are validated as previously unknown obesity genes, strengthening the association between this network and metabolic disease traits. Our analysis provides direct experimental support that complex traits such as obesity are emergent properties of molecular networks that are modulated by complex genetic loci and environmental factors.
 
Genetics of gene expression and its effect on disease
Valur Emilsson et al.
Nature 452 (7186), 423-8 (27 Mar 2008)
Kari Stefansson (deCODE): To elucidate the complexity of common human diseases such as obesity, we have analysed the expression of 23,720 transcripts in large population-based blood and adipose tissue cohorts comprehensively assessed for various phenotypes, including traits related to clinical obesity. In contrast to the blood expression profiles, we observed a marked correlation between gene expression in adipose tissue and obesity-related traits. Genome-wide linkage and association mapping revealed a highly significant genetic component to gene expression traits, including a strong genetic effect of proximal (cis) signals, with 50% of the cis signals overlapping between the two tissues profiled. Here we demonstrate an extensive transcriptional network constructed from the human adipose data that exhibits significant overlap with similar network modules constructed from mouse adipose data. A core network module in humans and mice was identified that is enriched for genes involved in the inflammatory and immune response and has been found to be causally associated to obesity-related traits.
 
Worldwide Human Relationships Inferred from Genome-Wide Patterns of Variation
Worldwide human relationships inferred from genomewide patterns of variation
Jun Li et al.
Science 319 (5866), 1100-4 (22 Feb 2008)
Richard Myers (Stanford University School of Medicine): We studied 938 unrelated individuals from 51 populations of the Human Genome Diversity Panel at 650,000 common single-nucleotide polymorphism loci. Individual ancestry and population substructure were detectable with very high resolution. The relationship between haplotype heterozygosity and geography was consistent with the hypothesis of a serial founder effect with a single origin in sub-Saharan Africa. In addition, we observed a pattern of ancestral allele frequency distributions that reflects variation in population dynamics among geographic regions. This data set allows the most comprehensive characterization to date of human genetic variation.
Posted by qyuan and 4 others to variation:SNP evolution on Fri Feb 29 2008 at 15:08 UTC | info | related
 
SNP discovery and allele frequency estimation by deep sequencing of reduced representation libraries
Curtis van Tassell et al.
Nat Meth 5 (3), 247-52 (Mar 2008)
Curtis Tassel (USDA): We describe an economical, efficient, single-step method for SNP discovery, validation and characterization that uses deep sequencing of reduced representation libraries (RRLs) from specified target populations. Using nearly 50 million sequences generated on an Illumina Genome Analyzer from DNA of 66 cattle representing three populations, we identified 62,042 putative SNPs and predicted their allele frequencies. Genotype data for these 66 individuals validated 92% of 23,357 selected genome-wide SNPs, with a genotypic and sequence allele frequency correlation of r = 0.67. Methods: requiring an average base quality score of at least 25 across the entire tag for all reads; required a minimum nucleotide quality score of 27 at the SNP position; required that for each tag pair, one of the two alternate tag allele sequences uniquely map to Btau3.1; required that the tag sequence containing the alternate allele have no exact match to Btau3.1; discarded tags that contained more than one SNP; required a minimum threshold of two copies of each allele to call a SNP;
Posted by qyuan to variation:SNP sequencing on Fri Feb 29 2008 at 13:50 UTC | info | related
 
Increased Transmission of Mutations by Low-Condition Females: Evidence for Condition-Dependent DNA Repair
Aneil Agrawal and Alethea Wang
PLoS Biology 6 (2), e30 (01 Feb 2008)
Aneil Agrawal (U Toronto):Here, we examine whether DNA repair processes are condition-dependent in Drosophila melanogaster. In this species, damaged DNA in sperm can be repaired by maternal repair processes after fertilization. We exposed high- and low-condition females to sperm containing damaged DNA and then assessed the frequency of lethal mutations on paternally derived X chromosomes transmitted by these females. The rate of lethal mutations transmitted by low-condition females was 30% greater than that of high-condition females, indicating reduced repair capacity of low-condition females.
Posted by qyuan to variation:SNP on Fri Feb 29 2008 at 13:27 UTC | info | related
 
Genotype, haplotype and copy-number variation in worldwide human populations
Mattias Jakobsson et al.
Nature 451 (7181), 998-1003 (21 Feb 2008)
Noah Rosenberg (UM) and Andrew Singleton (NIA): Here we report the analysis of high-quality genotypes at 525,910 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and 396 copy-number-variable loci in a worldwide sample of 29 populations. Analysis of SNP genotypes yields strongly supported fine-scale inferences about population structure. Increasing linkage disequilibrium is observed with increasing geographic distance from Africa, as expected under a serial founder effect for the out-of-Africa spread of human populations. New approaches for haplotype analysis produce inferences about population structure that complement results based on unphased SNPs. Despite a difference from SNPs in the frequency spectrum of the copy-number variants (CNVs) detected—including a comparatively large number of CNVs in previously unexamined populations from Oceania and the Americas—the global distribution of CNVs largely accords with population structure analyses for SNP data sets of similar size. Our results produce new inferences about inter-population variation, support the utility of CNVs in human population-genetic research, and serve as a genomic resource for human-genetic studies in diverse worldwide populations.
 
Proportionally more deleterious genetic variation in European than in African populations
Kirk Lohmueller et al.
Nature 451 (7181), 994-7 (21 Feb 2008)
Carlos Bustamante (Cornell University): Here we combine genome-wide polymorphism data from PCR-based exon resequencing, comparative genomic data across mammalian species, and protein structure predictions to estimate the number of functionally consequential single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) carried by each of 15 African American (AA) and 20 European American (EA) individuals. We find that AAs show significantly higher levels of nucleotide heterozygosity than do EAs for all categories of functional SNPs considered, including synonymous, non-synonymous, predicted 'benign', predicted 'possibly damaging' and predicted 'probably damaging' SNPs. This result is wholly consistent with previous work showing higher overall levels of nucleotide variation in African populations than in Europeans. EA individuals, in contrast, have significantly more genotypes homozygous for the derived allele at synonymous and non-synonymous SNPs and for the damaging allele at 'probably damaging' SNPs than AAs do. For SNPs segregating only in one population or the other, the proportion of non-synonymous SNPs is significantly higher in the EA sample (55.4%) than in the AA sample (47.0%; P < 2.3 times 10-37). We observe a similar proportional excess of SNPs that are inferred to be 'probably damaging' (15.9% in EA; 12.1% in AA; P < 3.3 times 10-11). Using extensive simulations, we show that this excess proportion of segregating damaging alleles in Europeans is probably a consequence of a bottleneck that Europeans experienced at about the time of the migration out of Africa.
Posted by qyuan and 4 others to variation:SNP evolution on Thu Feb 21 2008 at 17:03 UTC | info | related
 
Polymorphisms in the Drug Transporter Gene ABCB1 Predict Antidepressant Treatment Response in Depression
Manfred Uhr et al.
Neuron 57 (2), 203-9 (24 Jan 2008)
Manfred Uhr (Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry, Germany): Here we report that polymorphisms in the ABCB1 gene predict the response to antidepressant treatment in those depressed patients receiving drugs that have been identified as substrates of ABCB1 using abcb1ab double-knockout mice. Our results indicate that the combined consideration of both the medication's capacity to act as an ABCB1-transporter substrate and the patient's ABCB1 genotype are strong predictors for achieving a remission. This finding can be viewed as a further step into personalized antidepressant treatment.
Posted by qyuan to variation:SNP diseases on Thu Feb 21 2008 at 13:58 UTC | info | related
 
Polymorphic Y Chromosomes Harbor Cryptic Variation with Manifold Functional Consequences
Bernardo Lemos, Luciana Araripe, and Daniel Hartl
Science 319 (5859), 91-3 (04 Jan 2008)
Bernardo Lemos (Harvard University): We show that the Y chromosome of D. melanogaster harbors substantial genetic diversity in the form of polymorphisms for genetic elements that differentially affect the expression of hundreds of X-linked and autosomal genes. The affected genes are more highly expressed in males, more meagerly expressed in females, and more highly divergent between species.
Posted by qyuan and 2 others to variation:SNP expression on Mon Jan 14 2008 at 18:56 UTC | info | related

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