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SNPedia write-up tips

SNPedia write-up tips. Thrusday May 15: first draft due as Word document. Submit to gene210.stanford@gmail.com Saturday May 17: We will revise and return comments. Thrusday May 22: Post your revised write-ups on line at SNPedia.com. General outline Summarize the trait.

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SNPedia write-up tips

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  1. SNPedia write-up tips Thrusday May 15: first draft due as Word document. Submit to gene210.stanford@gmail.com Saturday May 17: We will revise and return comments. Thrusday May 22: Post your revised write-ups on line at SNPedia.com. General outline Summarize the trait. Report on the data. Discuss plausible mechanisms. Many examples at SNPedia.com or http://stanford.edu/class/gene210/archive/2013/projects_2013.html How to write a wiki: http://stanford.edu/class/gene210/web/html/snpedia.html

  2. SNPedia write-up tips Report on the data. Choose a strong paper from a good journal. Cohort size : 300 (small) vs 30,000 (large) # SNPs tested: ~1M (genome wide) vs 30 (candidate genes) Are the data believable? : 5 x 10-8 needed for genome wide significant p value. Or FDR < 5% after adjustment for multiple hypothesis testing. How big was the effect? Odds ratios are usually available. Increased risk is more informative if available. % variance explained is informative. Which allele is risk/protective?

  3. SNPedia write-up tips Discuss plausible mechanisms Not easy to find the causal SNP from an gene association study. Many tag SNPs are linked to the trait. All SNPs that are linked will show association with the trait. One SNPs is a causal mutation, the rest are bystanders. Some causal mutations affect protein coding regions and are easy to find. Mutations often affect gene expression and are difficult to recognize. Mutations can affect expression of a gene that is fairly distant. So it is not trivial to know which gene is being affected in a GWA study.

  4. Type 2 Diabetes With type 2 diabetes, your body either resists the effects of insulin — a hormone that regulates the movement of sugar into your cells — or doesn't produce enough insulin to maintain a normal glucose level.

  5. Type 2 Diabetes

  6. High blood glucose Insulin secretion from pancreas Eat ↑ Glucose absorption by muscle Low blood glucose

  7. Analyzed genome sequence of Steve Quake • Rare protein altering SNPs • But usually do not know what the gene does, so difficult to know if the mutation is causing a trait. • Common SNPs • Analyzed Steve’s SNPs for risk at common diseases • The known SNPs are all from GWAS • GWAS all use DNA chips, not genome sequence • Association only works for common SNPs • For common SNPs, Steve could have gotten essentially the same information from a 23andme chip.

  8. Genotation: clinical: Diabetes

  9. Type 2 Diabetes GWAS Date # cases trait SNPs 2008 10K T2D 16 2010 46K IR 17 2010 42K T2D 23 2012 34K T2D 33 2014 26K T2D 76

  10. MARCH 2014 Nature Genetics 26,488 cases (T2 D) and 83,964 controls European, east Asian, south Asian and Mexican and Mexican American ancestry. Confirmed 69 previous SNPs associated with T2D Found 7 new loci for T2D using multi-ethnic populations

  11. The causal mutation/gene is hard to identify from GWA studies Purple: Lead SNP Red: R2 > 0.8 Causal mutation? Affected gene?

  12. Missing heritability for Type 2 Diabetes

  13. Mutation landscape in diabetes gene

  14. Mutation landscape in diabetes gene Cases Controls

  15. SLC30A8 andType 2 Diabetes SLC30A8 encodesan islet zinc transporter zinc transporter ZnT8 p.Trp325Arg is a missense change with a 30-50% minor allele frequency p.Trp325Arg is thought to be a weak mutation and partially reduce ZnT8 function p.Trp325Arg is associated with 1.2x risk for type 2 Diabetes, fasting glucose and insulin levels If weak alleles of SLC30A8 result in a mild risk for Type 2 Diabetes, might strong (null) alleles have a high effect on Type 2 Diabetes?

  16. Strong (null) alleles of SLC30A8 show strong protection from Type 2 Diabetes • Sequenced SLC30A8 in many people. • Found 12 strong loss-of-function mutations – stop mutations and splice site mutations • Heterozygous carriers for a SLC30A8 null mutation show 65% decreased for Type 2 diabetes • Much stronger effect than the common allele • Effect was opposite to expected. Null alleles lead to decreased rather than increased risk for Type 2 diabetes.

  17. Mutation landscape in SLC30A8gene Cases Controls

  18. Rare mutations in GWAS genes do not explain the missing heritability for Type 2 Diabetes Sequence SLC30A8 in 145K people, and only 345 had mutations. Sequenced 115 GWAS genes in diabetics. Only SLC30A8 had mutations

  19. Maturity Onset Diabetes of the Young(MODY) MODY is a good candidate for personal genomic screening for several reasons: it is caused by dominant Mendelian mutations, such that heterozygous carriers develop disease; clinical presentation occurs early in life (<25 years) with nonketotichyperglycemia the frequency of MODY is 0.1–0.2% in European populations, with the majority of affected individuals being undiagnosed or misdiagnosed; MODY diagnosis can substantially affect diabetes prognosis and treatment of the individual or affected family members mutations in MODY genes also influence late-onset phenotypes, as common variants near many of these genes are associated with type 2 diabetes (T2D) risk in the general population this risk can be reduced by lifestyle intervention.

  20. MODY genes People with MODY often have mutations in these seven genes: HNF1A30, GCK31,32, HNF4A33 HNF1B34 PDX1 INS36 NEUROD1

  21. What is the penetrance of the MODY genes? Penetrance – the fraction of people with the mutation that have MODY. sequenced seven genes for maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) in 4003 people. 35 strong loss-of-function (pathogenic) mutations found in these genes None of the 35 carriers had MODY. Conclusions: MODY is very rare (~1/1000). These genes greatly increase the risk of MODY (10x). But carriers still have a low overall chance of getting MODY (1/100).

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