Pattern of sequence variation across 213 environmental response genes

被引:138
作者
Livingston, RJ
von Niederhausern, A
Jegga, AG
Crawford, DC
Carlson, CS
Rieder, MJ
Gowrisankar, S
Aronow, BJ
Weiss, RB
Nickerson, DA [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Dept Genome Sci, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[2] Univ Utah, Dept Human Genet, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA
[3] Univ Cincinnati, Childrens Hosp, Med Ctr, Dept Pediat Informat & Dev Biol, Cincinnati, OH 45229 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1101/gr.2730004
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
To promote the clinical and epidemiological studies that improve our understanding of human genetic susceptibility to environmental exposure, the Environmental Genome Project (EGP) has scanned 213 environmental response genes involved in DNA repair, cell cycle regulation, apoptosis, and metabolism for single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Many of these genes have been implicated by loss-of-function mutations associated with severe diseases attributable to decreased protection of genomic integrity. Therefore, the hypothesis for these studies is that individuals with functionally significant polymorphisms within these genes may be particularly susceptible to genotoxic environmental agents. On average, 20.4 kb of baseline genomic sequence or 86% of each gene, including a substantial amount of introns, all exons, and 1.3 kb upstream and downstream, were scanned for variations in the 90 samples of the Polymorphism Discovery Resource panel. The average nucleotide diversity across the 4.2 MB of these 213 genes is 6.7 x 10(-4), or one SNP every 1500 bp, when two random chromosomes are compared. The average candidate environmental response gene contains 26 PHASE inferred haplotypes, 34 common SNPs, 6.2 coding SNPs (cSNPs), and 2.5 nonsynonymous cSNPs. SIFT and Polyphen analysis of 541 nonsynonymous cSNPs identified 57 potentially deleterious SNPs. An additional eight polymorphisms predict altered protein translation. Because these genes represent 1% of all known human genes, extrapolation from these data predicts the total genomic set of cSNPs, nonsynonymous cSNPs, and potentially deleterious nonsynonymous cSNPs. The implications for the use of these data in direct and indirect association studies of environmentally induced diseases are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:1821 / 1831
页数:11
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