Liu Wenlei, Bentley Christy M, Floros Joanna
Department of Health Evaluation Sciences, Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, PA 17033, USA.
BMC Genet. 2003 Aug 11;4:13. doi: 10.1186/1471-2156-4-13.
SP-A, SP-B, and SP-D are pulmonary surfactant proteins. Several linkage and association studies have been done using these genes as markers to locate pulmonary disease susceptibility genes, but few have studied the markers systematically in different ethnic groups. Here we studied eight markers in SP-A, SP-B, and SP-D genes in seven ethnic groups from three races (Caucasian, Black and Hispanic). We measured the similarity of the marker distribution among the ethnic groups in order to see whether people in different ethnic groups or races could be mixed together for linkage and association studies. To evaluate the usefulness of these markers, we estimated the informativeness of each marker loci in the seven ethnic groups by assessing their heterozygosity and PIC values. We also conducted linkage disequilibrium (LD) analysis to identify associated marker loci and to estimate the haplotype frequencies in each of the seven ethnic groups in an attempt to find valuable haplotypes so that the level of polymorphism of the "markers" could be increased.
Our findings indicate that allele and genotype frequencies may be different between different ethnic groups, especially between ethnic groups from different races. The markers are in general polymorphic in a variety of study groups, especially for the two SP-A1 and SP-A2 markers. Two-locus LD analysis reveals that three pairs of loci are strongly associated together: B-18(A/C) with B1013(A/C), DA11(C/T) with DA160(A/G), SP-A1 with SP-A2. Three-locus LD analysis suggests that B-18(A/C), B1013(A/C) and B1580(C/T) are strongly associated with each other.
Allele and genotype frequency differences imply that different ethnic groups should be mixed with extreme caution before performing linkage and association studies. The associated markers could be used together to increase the level of polymorphism and the informativeness of the "markers".
表面活性蛋白-A(SP-A)、表面活性蛋白-B(SP-B)和表面活性蛋白-D(SP-D)是肺表面活性物质蛋白。已经进行了几项连锁和关联研究,使用这些基因作为标记来定位肺部疾病易感基因,但很少有研究在不同种族群体中对这些标记进行系统研究。在此,我们研究了来自三个种族(白种人、黑人和西班牙裔)的七个种族群体中SP-A、SP-B和SP-D基因的八个标记。我们测量了种族群体间标记分布的相似性,以观察不同种族群体的人是否可以混合在一起进行连锁和关联研究。为了评估这些标记的实用性,我们通过评估七个种族群体中每个标记位点的杂合性和PIC值来估计其信息含量。我们还进行了连锁不平衡(LD)分析,以识别相关的标记位点,并估计七个种族群体中每个群体的单倍型频率,试图找到有价值的单倍型,从而提高“标记”的多态性水平。
我们的研究结果表明,不同种族群体之间的等位基因和基因型频率可能不同,尤其是来自不同种族的种族群体之间。这些标记在各种研究群体中通常具有多态性,特别是对于两个SP-A1和SP-A2标记。两位点LD分析表明,三对位点紧密关联在一起:B-18(A/C)与B1013(A/C)、DA11(C/T)与DA160(A/G)、SP-A1与SP-A2。三位点LD分析表明,B-18(A/C)、B1013(A/C)和B1580(C/T)彼此紧密关联。
等位基因和基因型频率差异意味着在进行连锁和关联研究之前,不同种族群体的混合应极其谨慎。相关标记可以一起使用,以提高多态性水平和“标记”的信息含量。