Additional SNPs and linkage-disequilibrium analyses are necessary for whole-genome association studies in humans

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作者
Christopher S. Carlson
Michael A. Eberle
Mark J. Rieder
Joshua D. Smith
Leonid Kruglyak
Deborah A. Nickerson
机构
[1] University of Washington,Department of Genome Sciences
[2] Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center,Division of Human Biology
[3] Howard Hughes Medical Institute,undefined
来源
Nature Genetics | 2003年 / 33卷
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摘要
More than 5 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with minor-allele frequency greater than 10% are expected to exist in the human genome1. Some of these SNPs may be associated with risk of developing common diseases2,3,4. To assess the power of currently available SNPs to detect such associations, we resequenced 50 genes in two ethnic samples and measured patterns of linkage disequilibrium between the subset of SNPs reported in dbSNP and the complete set of common SNPs. Our results suggest that using all 2.7 million SNPs currently in the database would detect nearly 80% of all common SNPs in European populations but only 50% of those common in the African American population and that efficient selection of a minimal subset of SNPs for use in association studies requires measurement of allele frequency and linkage disequilibrium relationships for all SNPs in dbSNP.
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页码:518 / 521
页数:3
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