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Structural variants can be more informative for disease diagnostics, prognostics and translation than current SNP mapping and exon sequencing
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Structural variants can be more informative for disease diagnostics, prognostics and translation than current SNP mapping and exon sequencing

Allen D. Roses, P. Anthony Akkari, Ornit Chiba-Falek, Michael W. Lutz, William Kirby Gottschalk, Ann Marie Saunders, Bob Saul, Scott Sundseth and Daniel Burns
Expert opinion on drug metabolism & toxicology, Vol.12(2), pp.135-147
2016
PMID: 26727306

Abstract

Biochemistry & Molecular Biology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Pharmacology & Pharmacy Science & Technology Toxicology
Introduction: In this article we discuss several human neurological diseases and their relationship to specific highly polymorphic small structural variants (SVs). Unlike genome-wide association analysis (GWAS), this methodology is not a genome screen to define new possibly associated genes, requiring statistical corrections for a million association tests. SVs provide local mapping information at a specific locus. Used with phylogenetic analysis, the specific association of length variants can be mapped and recognized. Areas covered: This experimental strategy provides identification of DNA variants, particularly variable length Simple Sequence Repeats (SSRs or STRs or microsatellites) that provide specific local association data at the SV locus. Phylogenetic analysis that includes the specific appearance of different length SV variations can differentiate specific phenotypic risks in a population such as age of onset related to variable length polymorphisms and risk of phenotypic variations associated with several adjacent structural variations (SVs). We focus on data for three recent examples associated with Alzheimer's disease, Levy Bodies, and Parkinson's disease. Expert opinion: SVs are understudied, but have led directly to mechanism of pathogenesis studies involving the regulation of gene expression. The identification of specific length polymorphisms associated with clinical disease has led to translational advances and new drug discovery.

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Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.52 Neurodegenerative Diseases
1.52.765 ALS Mechanisms
Web Of Science research areas
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Pharmacology & Pharmacy
Toxicology
ESI research areas
Pharmacology & Toxicology
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