Positional Cloning of Disease Genes: Advantages of Genetic Isolates
- 1 September 1999
- journal article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Human Heredity
- Vol. 50 (1) , 66-75
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000022892
Abstract
Genetic isolates with a history of a small founder population, long-lasting isolation and population bottlenecks represent exceptional resources in the identification of disease genes. Specific rare, monogenic diseases become enriched, and families with multiple affected individuals occur frequently enough to be used in linkage analyses for locus identification. Further, the vast majority of cases are caused by the same mutation, and disease alleles reveal linkage disequilibrium (LD) with markers over significant genetic intervals; this facilitates disease locus identification by similarity search for a shared genotype or haplotype in small study samples consisting of few affected individuals. LD observed in disease alleles adds power to linkage analyses and helps to define the exact location of disease loci on the genetic map. Typically, based on the linkage disequilibrium and the ancient haplotype, the critical DNA region can be defined from the original 1- to 2-cM resolution obtained in linkage analysis to 50–200 kb, greatly facilitating the targeting of physical cloning and sequencing efforts. These advantages have been well demonstrated in the positional cloning of several rare monogenic diseases enriched in population isolates like the example of Finland used here. How useful genetic isolates will prove to be in the identification of complex disease genes is dependent on the genealogical history of the isolate, including the size of the founding population and the expansion rate during the history of the population.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Assignment of the Muscle-Eye-Brain Disease Gene to 1p32-p34 by Linkage Analysis and Homozygosity MappingAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 1999
- A Gene for Meckel Syndrome Maps to Chromosome 11q13American Journal of Human Genetics, 1998
- Assignment of the Disease Locus for Lethal Congenital Contracture Syndrome to a Restricted Region of Chromosome 9q34, by Genome Scan Using Five Affected IndividualsAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 1998
- Positionally Cloned Gene for a Novel Glomerular Protein—Nephrin—Is Mutated in Congenital Nephrotic SyndromePublished by Elsevier ,1998
- Assignment of the Tibial Muscular Dystrophy Locus to Chromosome 2q31American Journal of Human Genetics, 1998
- Assignment of the Locus for PLO-SL, a Frontal-Lobe Dementia with Bone Cysts, to 19q13American Journal of Human Genetics, 1998
- Positional cloning of the gene associated with X-linked juvenile retinoschisisNature Genetics, 1997
- Mutation in the follicle-stimulating hormone receptor gene causes hereditary hypergonadotropic ovarian failureCell, 1995
- Cornea plana congenita gene assigned to the long arm of chromosome 12 by linkage analysisGenomics, 1995
- Refined Assignment of the Infantile Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis (INCL, CLN1) Locus at 1p32: Incorporation of Linkage Disequilibrium in Multipoint AnalysisGenomics, 1993