The impact of SNP density on fine-scale patterns of linkage disequilibrium
Open Access
- 20 January 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Human Molecular Genetics
- Vol. 13 (6) , 577-588
- https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddh060
Abstract
Linkage disequilibrium (LD) is a measure of the degree of association between alleles in a population. The detection of disease-causing variants by association with neighbouring single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) depends on the existence of strong LD between them. Previous studies have indicated that the extent of LD is highly variable in different chromosome regions and different populations, demonstrating the importance of genome-wide accurate measurement of LD at high resolution throughout the human genome. A uniform feature of these studies has been the inability to detect LD in regions of low marker density. To investigate the dependence of LD patterns on marker selection we performed a high-resolution study in African-American, Asian and UK Caucasian populations. We selected over 5000 SNPs with an average spacing of ∼1 SNP per 2 kb after validating ca 12 000 SNPs derived from a dense SNP collection (1 SNP per 0.3 kb on average). Applications of different statistical methods of LD assessment highlight similar areas of high and low LD. However, at high resolution, features such as overall sequence coverage in LD blocks and block boundaries vary substantially with respect to marker density. Model-based linkage disequilibrium unit (LDU) maps appear robust to marker density and consistently influenced by marker allele frequency. The results suggest that very dense marker sets will be required to yield stable views of fine-scale LD in the human genome.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- Linkage Disequilibrium and Inference of Ancestral Recombination in 538 Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism Clusters across the Human GenomeAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2003
- Hot and Cold Spots of Recombination in the Human Genome: the Reason We Should Find Them and How This Can Be AchievedAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2003
- Recombination hotspots rather than population history dominate linkage disequilibrium in the MHC class II regionHuman Molecular Genetics, 2003
- Hapmap flapCurrent Biology, 2002
- Medical applications of haplotype-based SNP maps: learning to walk before we runNature Genetics, 2002
- A high-resolution recombination map of the human genomeNature Genetics, 2002
- New Mapping Project Splits the CommunityScience, 2002
- Patterns of linkage disequilibrium in the human genomeNature Reviews Genetics, 2002
- The DNA sequence and comparative analysis of human chromosome 20Nature, 2001
- How many diseases does it take to map a gene with SNPs?Nature Genetics, 2000