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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Statistical Methods to Combine SPN and CNV Information in Genome-Wide Association Studies : An Application to Bladder Cancer / Utilisation conjointe de l'information apportée par les différents polymorphismes, SNPs et CNVs, dans les études d'association pangénomique : application au cancer de la vessie

Marenne, Gaëlle 28 September 2012 (has links)
Les variations en nombre de copies (CNV) sont des gains ou pertes d’une séquence d’ADN et peuvent avoir un rôle dans la susceptibilité à certaines maladies. Les CNVs peuvent être détectés par les puces de SNPs de haute résolution en analysant les intensités des allèles avec des algorithmes de détection des CNVs tels que CNV partition, PennCNV et QuantiSNP. Dans cette thèse, nous avons évalué les performances de ces outils pour la détection des CNVs au niveau pangénomique et pour les tests d'association. Nous avons également étudié des stratégies d'association combinant les informations de l'allèle et du nombre de copies pour des SNP situés dans des CNV. Nous avons appliqué ces outils pour mener une étude d’association pan-génomique avec les CNV en utilisant les données de l'étude espagnole du cancer de lavessie (SBC)/EPICURO générées par la puce Illumina 1M.Nos résultats montrent une faible fiabilité et une faible sensibilité des algorithmes de détection des CNV. Dans la région du gène GSTM1 où un CNV très fréquent existe qui est associé au risque de cancer de la vessie, nous avons constaté que les algorithmes de détection des CNV ont de faibles performances. Néanmoins, l’utilisation de la mesure d'intensité des allèles dans les tests d'association peut alors être une alternative intéressante car cela nous a permis de détecter cette association connue. Pour les SNPs situés dans des CNVs, nous avons étudié plusieurs stratégies de tests d'association et nous avons montré que la plus puissante était d’utiliser un modèle avec deux termes correspondant respectivement à la somme et à la différence du nombre de copies des deux allèles. Finalement, en appliquant ces stratégies à l'étude (SBC)/EPICURO, nous avons identifié des CNVs potentiellement associés au risque de cancer de la vessie, ainsi que des SNP dont l'allèle et le nombre de copies pourraient être impliqués dans le risque de cancer de la vessie. / Copy number variations (CNVs) are losses or gains of DNA sequences that may play a role in specific disease susceptibility. CNVs can be detected by high-resolution SNP-arrays through the analysis of allele intensities with CNV calling algorithms such as CNVpartition, PennCNV and QuantiSNP. In this thesis, we identified and assessed the performances of available tools for CNV calling and for association testing, at the genome-wide level. We also investigatedassociation strategies that combine information on both the allele and the number of copies for SNPs located in CNV regions. We applied these tools to conduct a genome-wide association study with CNV using data from the Spanish Bladder Cancer (SBC)/EPICURO Study generated by the Illumina 1M SNP-array. Our results showed a low reliability and a low sensitivity of the investigated CNV calling algorithms applied to SNP-array data. The GSTM1 locus shows a very frequent CNV that is associated with bladder cancer (BC) risk. We reported that the calling algorithms performed very poorly in identifying this CNV. We proposed using allele intensity measures (LRR) as a screening step to assess association as it allowed the detection of the GSTM1 CNV association with BC. To combine the allele and the number of copies for SNPs located in CNV regions, we investigated several strategies of association testing and we showed that the more powerfulone used a two-term model with the sum and the difference of the number of copies of both alleles. Finally, by applying these strategies to the (SBC)/EPICURO Study, we identified CNV regions potentially associated with BC risk, as well as SNPs for which both the allele and the number of copies could be involved in BC risk.
2

Genetics of ankylosing spondylitis

Karaderi, Tugce January 2012 (has links)
Ankylosing spondylitis (AS) is a common inflammatory arthritis of the spine and other affected joints, which is highly heritable, being strongly influenced by the HLA-B27 status, as well as hundreds of mostly unknown genetic variants of smaller effect. The aim of my research was to confirm some of the previously observed genetic associations and to identify new associations, many of which are in biological pathways relevant to AS pathogenesis, most notably the IL-23/T<sub>H</sub>17 axis (IL23R) and antigen presentation (ERAP1 and ERAP2). Studies presented in this thesis include replication and refinement of several potential associations initially identified by earlier GWAS (WTCCC-TASC, 2007 and TASC, 2010). I conducted an extended study of IL23R association with AS and undertook a meta-analysis, confirming the association between AS and IL23R (non-synonymous SNP rs11209026, p=1.5 x 10-9, OR=0.61). An extensive re-sequencing and fine mapping project, including a meta-analysis, to replicate and refine the association of TNFRSF1A with AS was also undertaken; a novel variant in intron 6 was identified and a weak association with a low frequency variant, rs4149584 (p=0.01, OR=1.58), was detected. Somewhat stronger associations were seen with rs4149577 (p=0.002, OR=0.91) and rs4149578 (p=0.015, OR=1.14) in the meta-analysis. Associations at several additional loci had been identified by a more recent GWAS (WTCCC2-TASC, 2011). I used in silico techniques, including imputation using a denser panel of variants from the 1000 Genomes Project, conditional analysis and rare/low frequency variant analysis, to refine these associations. Imputation analysis (1782 cases/5167 controls) revealed novel associations with ERAP2 (rs4869313, p=7.3 x 10-8, OR=0.79) and several additional candidate loci including IL6R, UBE2L3 and 2p16.3. Ten SNPs were then directly typed in an independent sample (1804 cases/1848 controls) to replicate selected associations and to determine the imputation accuracy. I established that imputation using the 1000 Genomes Project pilot data was largely reliable, specifically for common variants (genotype concordence~97%). However, more accurate imputation of low frequency variants may require larger reference populations, like the most recent 1000 Genomes reference panels. The results of my research provide a better understanding of the complex genetics of AS, and help identify future targets for genetic and functional studies.

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