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TESTING A METHODOLOGY FOR IDENTIFYING CLUSTERED ALLELE LOSS USING SNP ARRAY DATA

HumanHap550 Genotyping BeadChip provides a platform allowing for genotyping of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) greater than 550,000 loci. Such SNPs genotyping array technology makes it possible to identify genetic variation in individuals and across populations, profiling somatic mutations in cancer and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) events, amplifying deletions of regions of DNA, as well as possibly evaluating germline mutations in individuals. This study particularly focuses on analysis of clusters of Mendelian inconsistencies (MIs) in the SNPs array for six Russian radiation worker family trios, in order to identify the type of deletion variants for offspring such as inherited parental deletion variants (PDVs), spontaneous mutations (SMs) and germline mutations (GMs). By adapting the Bayesian theorem combining with the hereditary rule, this study presents an exciting result because 96.15% of genotypes in six selected clusters under the investigation could be identified as either PDVs or SMs/GMs, with two clusters are perfectly identified as SMs/GMs. This opens an avenue for further investigation of whether external environmental exposures (e.g., ionizing radiation) can effect the frequency of deletion variants (i.e., germline mutations) occurring in the offspring of highly exposed nuclear workers. While the applied methodology provides a practical means to recognize the genomic variations within the SNPs array some weaknesses of the study have been observed; particularly, the control group which consists of 112 individuals of Yoruba, Han Chinese, Japanese and Mormons is of deficiency on its sample size, diverse ethnicity and DNA process compared to the case group, and unclean potential hemizygous SNPs (i.e., Mendelian inconsistencies). Further statistical investigation and research needs to be conducted in order to overcome the weaknesses observed in the study; hence, the methodology introduced would be further of enhancement in its reliability and validity and it should be more effective when applied.
Public health significance: The development of a reliable method to identify and count germline mutations in radiation workers could be generalized to exposures from any form of environmental mutagen (e.g., chemicals). Such a generalized marker could be used to measure the effects of various toxic environmental exposures on specific individuals and to predict genetically determined illness conditions.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:PITT/oai:PITTETD:etd-12062007-210615
Date31 January 2008
CreatorsZheng, Ping
ContributorsDay, Richard D., Tseng, George C., Grant, Stephen G
PublisherUniversity of Pittsburgh
Source SetsUniversity of Pittsburgh
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
Sourcehttp://etd.library.pitt.edu/ETD/available/etd-12062007-210615/
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