Simulations provide support for the common disease-common variant hypothesis.

Genetics

Department of Statistics, Rice University, Houston, Texas 77005, USA.

Published: February 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • The success of mapping complex disease genes relies on the frequency of susceptibility alleles, where the common disease-common variant (CDCV) hypothesis suggests fewer alleles at each locus make it easier to study.
  • Forward-time population simulations were used to analyze various factors, including demographic changes and genetic interactions, affecting allelic diversity in diseases.
  • The study supports the CDCV hypothesis, highlighting population expansions and interactions between multiple loci as critical to understanding the mapping of complex diseases.

Article Abstract

The success of mapping genes involved in complex diseases, using association or linkage disequilibrium methods, depends heavily on the number and frequency of susceptibility alleles of these genes. These methods will be economically and statistically feasible if common diseases are usually influenced by one or a few susceptibility alleles at each locus (common disease-common variant, CDCV, hypothesis), but not so if there is a high degree of allelic heterogeneity. Here, we use forward-time population simulations to investigate the impact of various genetic and demographic factors on the allelic spectra of human diseases, on the basis of two models proposed by Reich and Lander and by Pritchard. Factors considered are more complex demographies, a finite-allele mutation model, population structure and migration, and interaction between disease susceptibility loci. The conclusion is that the CDCV hypothesis holds and that the phenomenon is caused by transient effects of demography (population expansion). As a result, we devise a multilocus generalization of the Reich and Lander model and demonstrate how interaction between loci with respect to their response to selection may lead to complex effects. We discuss the implications for mapping of complex diseases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1800600PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1534/genetics.106.058164DOI Listing

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