Iconocast Logo

Welcome To Iconocast

How to add a URL link from your web site to the Iconocast web sites

Virtual tour of Southern California



 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: cataloging + variations + genetics  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Professor explored inherited diseases
Baltimore Sun, United States - Jul 24, 2008
Dr. McKusick's life was spent studying genetic variation, but he entered the world in 1921 as a case of genetic similitude with an identical twin brother, ...
Full Text
Science Magazine (subscription) - Jul 24, 2008
Garrod saw even further than what we would call a recessive phenotype: he closed his paper with the insight that genetic variation of chemical structures ...
HD Array Sales, Agbio Segment Help Illumina Q2 Revenue Rise 66 Percent
bioArray News (subscription), NY - Jul 29, 2008
?Very often, it starts with a sequencing project to do discovery and then it translates into implementation of those genetic variations onto a chip, ...ILMN
"It is - still - the best zoological blog out there, period"
ScienceBlogs - Jul 25, 2008
Catalog of living whales. Smithsonian Insitution United States National Museum, Bulletin 246, 1-259. Hoelzel, AR, Potter, CW & Best, PB 1998. Genetic ...
Illumina Inc. Q2 2008 Earnings Call Transcript
Seeking Alpha, NY - Jul 22, 2008
... most detailed map of human genetic variation to-date. The project will build on the international HapMap Project, which cataloged human genetic variance ...ILMN
Source: Google News

Variations on a Theme: Cataloging Human DNA Sequence Variation -
FS Collins, MS Guyer, A Chakravarti - Science, 1997 - sciencemag.org
... is now right to begin the systematic cataloging of human ... concluded that immediate
action to develop a catalog of human sequence variation is warranted (13 ...

dbSNP: the NCBI database of genetic variation -
ST Sherry, MH Ward, M Kholodov, J Baker, L Phan, … - Nucleic Acids Research, 2001 - Oxford Univ Press
... polymorphisms (SNPs) are among the most common genetic variation. ... discovery since
a dense catalog of SNPs ... scale studies in association genetics (1), functional ...

Chromosomal variation in man: catalog of chromosomal variants and anomalies. -
DS Borgaonkar, DR Bolling, C Partridge, FH Ruddle, … - Cytogenet Cell Genet, 1975 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Chromosomal variation in man: catalog of chromosomal variants and anomalies.
Borgaonkar DS, Bolling DR, Partridge C, Ruddle FH, McKusick VA. ...

Population history and natural selection shape patterns of genetic variation in 132 genes -
JM Akey, MA Eberle, MJ Rieder, CS Carlson, MD … - PLoS Biol, 2004 - biology.plosjournals.org
... the opportunity to exhaustively catalog variation, which attenuates ... N. Rajkumar)
for cataloging the variation ... and background selection on neutral variation. ...

Detection of large-scale variation in the human genome -
AJ Iafrate, L Feuk, MN Rivera, ML Listewnik, PK … - Nature Genetics, 2004 - nature.com
... 12 will probably detect additional new genomic variations. ... contrast to most
small-scale genetic polymorphisms, the ... To catalog this large-scale genomic variation ...

Catalog of 320 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 20 quinone oxidoreductase and … -
A Iida, A Sekine, S Saito, Y Kitamura, T Kitamoto, … - J Hum Genet, 2001 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Catalog of 320 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 20 quinone ... for investigations
designed to detect association(s) between genetic variations and common ...

[PDF] Variation is the spice of life -
L Kruglyak, DA Nickerson - Nat Genet, 2001 - nucleus.cshl.edu
... in human health and variation, centralized cataloging efforts may be ... Already, the
new catalog allows us to con ... range of com- mon molecular variation present in ...
-

Haplotype Structure and Population Genetic Inferences from Nucleotide-Sequence Variation in Human … -
AG Clark, KM Weiss, DA Nickerson, SL Taylor, A … - The American Journal of Human Genetics, 1998 - Elsevier
... problem of the genetics of common, chronic diseases is a need to understand the
quantity, nature, and arrangement of underlying DNA-sequence variation and to ...

Genetic variation of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase: a catalog and future prospects.
E Beutler, A Yoshida - Medicine (Baltimore), 1988 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Medicine (Baltimore). 1988 Sep;67(5):311-34. Genetic variation of
glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase: a catalog and future prospects. ...

Genetic Analysis of Case/Control Data Using Estimated Haplotype Frequencies: Application to APOE … -
D Fallin, A Cohen, L Essioux, I Chumakov, M … - Genome Research, 2001 - Cold Spring Harbor Lab
... Haplotype structure and population genetic inferences from nucleotide-sequence
variation in human lipoprotein ... Variations on a theme: Cataloging human DNA ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

Cataloging the Structural Variations in Human Genetics

A major new effort to uncover the medium- and large-scale genetic differences between humans may soon reveal DNA sequences that contribute to a wide range of diseases, according to a paper by Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator Evan Eichler and 17 colleagues published in the May 10, 2007, Nature. The undertaking will help researchers identify structural variations in DNA sequences, which Eichler says amount to as much as five to ten percent of the human genome.

Past studies of human genetic differences usually have focused on the individual “letters” or bases of a DNA sequence. But the genetic differences between humans amount to more than simple spelling errors. “Structural changes — insertions, duplications, deletions, and inversions of DNA — are extremely common in the human population,” says Eichler. “In fact, more bases are involved in structural changes in the genome than are involved in single-base-pair changes.”

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

In some cases, individual genes appear in multiple copies because of duplications of DNA segments. In other cases, segments of DNA appear in some people but not others, which means that the “reference” human genome produced by the Human Genome Project is incomplete. “We're finding new sequence in the human genome that is not in the reference sequence,” Eichler says.

These structural changes can influence both disease susceptibility and the normal functioning and appearance of the body. Color-blindness, increased risk of prostate cancer, and susceptibility to some forms of cardiovascular disease result from deletions of particular genes or parts of genes. Extra copies of a gene known as CC3L1 reduce a person's susceptibility to HIV infection and progression to AIDS. Lower than normal quantities of other genes can lead to intestinal or kidney diseases.

Variation in the number of genes or in gene regulation caused by structural rearrangements may also contribute to more common diseases. “The million dollar question is what is the genetic basis of diseases like diabetes, hypertension, and high cholesterol levels?” says Eichler. “ We know there is a genetic factor, but what is the role of single base pair changes versus structural changes?”

The project Eichler and his colleagues describe in their paper will help answer this question. Using DNA from 62 people who were studied as part of the International HapMap Project, they are creating bacterial “libraries” of DNA segments for each person. The ends of the segments are then sequenced to uncover evidence of structural variation. Whenever such evidence is found, the entire DNA segment is sequenced to catalog all of the genetic differences between the segment and the reference sequence.

The result, says Eichler, will be a tool that geneticists can use to associate structural variation with particular diseases. “It might be that if I have an extra copy of gene A, my threshold for disease X may be higher or lower.” Geneticists will then be able to test, or genotype, large numbers of individuals who have a particular disease to look for structural variants that they have in common. If a given variant is contributing to a disease, it will occur at a higher frequency in people with the disease.

Knowing about structural variation in the human genome will also allow geneticists to analyze single-base-pair changes more effectively, according to Aravinda Chakravarti, a geneticist at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine who was not a coauthor of the paper. “We have to look at structural variants from a different perspective, because they are adding or subtracting something from the genome,” Chakravarti says. By understanding the patterns of both structural variants and single-base-pair changes in the population, “we'll learn a lot.” To use both kinds of information in tandem, Eichler and his colleagues plan to incorporate the structural information they gather into existing databases on single-base-pair changes.

The project, which is being funded by the National Human Genome Research Institute at the National Institutes of Health, is difficult and expensive, Eichler admits. “It's a lot of work, because it's essentially doing 62 additional human genome projects,” he says. “Having been involved in the first one, I swore I would never do it again. But in this case we're looking at the coolest parts of the genome.”

 
 
 
Google
Web www.iconocast.com
 
 
Continue News With: News7 ; News8 ; News9 ; News9A


ADVERTISEMENT

Iconocast is about learning and teaching without borders; we offer eMarketing, Internet Advertising, Internet Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Marketing, Online Branding, and eMarketing News Services.

 

Iconocast Home Page

 © 2002-2006

Keywords:

Contact Iconocast