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GLEAM Glasgow Linkage Exclusion Analysis Method

GLEAM Glasgow Linkage Exclusion Analysis Method. Su Stenhouse, Daniel Ellis, Ayesha Ahmed and Vicky Murday. The Problem. Diagnostic molecular genetics has traditionally been concerned with single gene disorders Fragile X, cystic fibrosis, Duchenne muscular dystrophy

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GLEAM Glasgow Linkage Exclusion Analysis Method

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  1. GLEAMGlasgow Linkage Exclusion Analysis Method Su Stenhouse, Daniel Ellis, Ayesha Ahmed and Vicky Murday

  2. The Problem • Diagnostic molecular genetics has traditionally been concerned with single gene disorders • Fragile X, cystic fibrosis, Duchenne muscular dystrophy • As more disease associations are identified and whole gene sequencing has become routine in diagnostic laboratories there is more demand for analysis of disorders which may be caused by one of several genes

  3. ‘Problem’ disorders • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy • Long QT • APKD • Dominant retinitis pigmentosa • Tuberous sclerosis • Ehlers Danlos • Dilated cardiomyopathy • The list goes on…..

  4. The Solutions? • For BRCA 1 &2 in familial breast cancer it is possible to sequence both genes to search for a mutation • Disorders with more genes such as cardiomyopathy are harder to deal with • Next generation sequencing technologies promise very rapid sequencing but still result in massive quantities of data to analyse • Can the NHS afford the expensive equipment required? • Sequence only the commonest genes but fewer families benefit

  5. The Old Idea • Linkage analysis can be used to indicate which of a number of genes might be involved in a particular family • However this requires a good family structure and samples from affected and unaffected individuals in several generations • Samples are rarely available from the required number of individuals

  6. CMGS 2006 The Eureka moment

  7. The New Idea • Conventional linkage analysis uses a large number of individuals and a few markers • If it were possible to use a very large number of markers then fewer family members would be required • DNA CHIP technology allows thousands of markers to be analysed at once • If two affected family members were oppositely homozygous for any marker within a gene that gene would be excluded from causing the disease in that family

  8. Phase • The crux of this method is that it eliminates the need to establish phase which is required for conventional linkage analysis • Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are chosen with a minor allele frequency of 0.3 or above • The SNPs are chosen along the length of the genes of interest and the immediate flanking regions

  9. Relative 1 Relative 2 A B A A B A B A A A B B A B A B A Novel Use of CHIP Technology • Using SNPs to DISPROVE linkage If these were two affected patients in a pedigree and the two diagrams represented their genotypes for 4 SNPs in a putative gene, being homozygous for different alleles in the 3rd SNP would suggest there was no linkage between the disease and the gene.

  10. Choice of SNP allele frequency • Chance both parents heterozygote from Hardy-Weinberg is 2pq x 2pq = 4p2q2 • Chance for a SNP to be informative is p2q2 divided by 2 • So if p=0.3 and q=0.7 chance informative is 0.022 • If p=0.5 and q=0.5 then chance informative is 0.031

  11. Choice of SNP numbers • Using a binomial distribution, if 100 SNPs with allele frequencies between 0.3 and 0.5 are used per gene there is a 90 to 96% chance of finding at least one informative. • If 150 SNPs of those allele frequencies are used this rises to 96 to 99%

  12. Evidence Base • Using families with a known BRCA1 or 2 mutation we aimed to establish whether we would have accurately predicted which gene was involved using this novel method.

  13. The Families • We identified 57 Scottish BRCA 1 or BRCA2 families in which we had samples from more than one affected individual available and 16 were provided from the South West Thames genetic service.

  14. Proof of Principle • SNPs were selected along the length of the BRCA 1 and 2 genes • Illumina system chosen as the platform as equipment was available to us • Professor Connor kindly agreed to fund the initial CHIP manufacture • The initial CHIP carried 214 SNPs for BRCA 1 and 170 SNPs for BRCA 2 all with a MAF of >0.3

  15. Illumina CHIP • Random SNPs attached to ‘beads in wells’ • ILLUMINA GoldengateTM assay uses a four colour code to identify which SNP is where • Extension and ligation from genomic DNA • PCR ligated template using universal primers • Hybridise to IllumicodeTM array and identify SNPs • Analysis takes 3 days and can type 96 patients

  16. Costs • First CHIP is very expensive as the cost is in manufacturing the first SNP pool • Subsequent CHIPs are relatively cheap as the same SNP pool can be used • Averaging out the cost of first and subsequent CHIPs we estimate a cost of about £50 per patient • Cf ~£800 to sequence each gene in each patient or £76,800 for 96 patients

  17. Choosing the samples • As we are looking for opposite homozygosity parent/child combinations cannot be used as they will by definition share an allele • Sibs, cousins, aunt/niece etc • The further removed in the pedigree the more informative they are likely to be.

  18. The Pairs • 69 siblings • 21 cousins • 14 aunt/niece • 2 great aunt/niece

  19. RESULTS

  20. RESULTS

  21. RESULTS

  22. SHIL • Following the success of the proof of principle we approached Scottish Health Innovations Ltd who are charged with supporting suitable projects emerging from the health service. • They agreed to fund a patent application and further development work • Patent application is now in process • This is intended as a protective patent rather than a profitable one! • Cardiomyopathy CHIP now about to be trialled

  23. SHIL Nomination • Without our knowledge the project was nominated for the Scottish Healthcare Innovation of the Year Award • Shortlisted projects had to give a presentation to the selection committee and answer questions from the panel (Dragon’s Den scenario) • In Perth!

  24. We Won!

  25. Acknowledgements • We would like to thank the staff at the molecular lab in St Georges for kindly looking out and sending us the samples form Vicky’s erstwhile patients. We know how time consuming such activity is!

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