957 resultados para human genome variation


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BACKGROUND: Pseudogenes have long been considered as nonfunctional genomic sequences. However, recent evidence suggests that many of them might have some form of biological activity, and the possibility of functionality has increased interest in their accurate annotation and integration with functional genomics data. RESULTS: As part of the GENCODE annotation of the human genome, we present the first genome-wide pseudogene assignment for protein-coding genes, based on both large-scale manual annotation and in silico pipelines. A key aspect of this coupled approach is that it allows us to identify pseudogenes in an unbiased fashion as well as untangle complex events through manual evaluation. We integrate the pseudogene annotations with the extensive ENCODE functional genomics information. In particular, we determine the expression level, transcription-factor and RNA polymerase II binding, and chromatin marks associated with each pseudogene. Based on their distribution, we develop simple statistical models for each type of activity, which we validate with large-scale RT-PCR-Seq experiments. Finally, we compare our pseudogenes with conservation and variation data from primate alignments and the 1000 Genomes project, producing lists of pseudogenes potentially under selection. CONCLUSIONS: At one extreme, some pseudogenes possess conventional characteristics of functionality; these may represent genes that have recently died. On the other hand, we find interesting patterns of partial activity, which may suggest that dead genes are being resurrected as functioning non-coding RNAs. The activity data of each pseudogene are stored in an associated resource, psiDR, which will be useful for the initial identification of potentially functional pseudogenes.

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The goals of the human genome project did not include sequencing of the heterochromatic regions. We describe here an initial sequence of 1.1 Mb of the short arm of human chromosome 21 (HSA21p), estimated to be 10% of 21p. This region contains extensive euchromatic-like sequence and includes on average one transcript every 100 kb. These transcripts show multiple inter- and intrachromosomal copies, and extensive copy number and sequence variability. The sequencing of the "heterochromatic" regions of the human genome is likely to reveal many additional functional elements and provide important evolutionary information.

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BACKGROUND: The P-type II ATPase gene family encodes proteins with an important role in adaptation of the cell to variation in external K+, Ca2+ and Na2+ concentrations. The presence of P-type II gene subfamilies that are specific for certain kingdoms has been reported but was sometimes contradicted by discovery of previously unknown homologous sequences in newly sequenced genomes. Members of this gene family have been sampled in all of the fungal phyla except the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF; phylum Glomeromycota), which are known to play a key-role in terrestrial ecosystems and to be genetically highly variable within populations. Here we used highly degenerate primers on AMF genomic DNA to increase the sampling of fungal P-Type II ATPases and to test previous predictions about their evolution. In parallel, homologous sequences of the P-type II ATPases have been used to determine the nature and amount of polymorphism that is present at these loci among isolates of Glomus intraradices harvested from the same field. RESULTS: In this study, four P-type II ATPase sub-families have been isolated from three AMF species. We show that, contrary to previous predictions, P-type IIC ATPases are present in all basal fungal taxa. Additionally, P-Type IIE ATPases should no longer be considered as exclusive to the Ascomycota and the Basidiomycota, since we also demonstrate their presence in the Zygomycota. Finally, a comparison of homologous sequences encoding P-type IID ATPases showed unexpectedly that indel mutations among coding regions, as well as specific gene duplications occur among AMF individuals within the same field. CONCLUSION: On the basis of these results we suggest that the diversification of P-Type IIC and E ATPases followed the diversification of the extant fungal phyla with independent events of gene gains and losses. Consistent with recent findings on the human genome, but at a much smaller geographic scale, we provided evidence that structural genomic changes, such as exonic indel mutations and gene duplications are less rare than previously thought and that these also occur within fungal populations.

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BACKGROUND: The need for an integrated view of data obtained from high-throughput technologies gave rise to network analyses. These are especially useful to rationalize how external perturbations propagate through the expression of genes. To address this issue in the case of drug resistance, we constructed biological association networks of genes differentially expressed in cell lines resistant to methotrexate (MTX). METHODS: Seven cell lines representative of different types of cancer, including colon cancer (HT29 and Caco2), breast cancer (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-468), pancreatic cancer (MIA PaCa-2), erythroblastic leukemia (K562) and osteosarcoma (Saos-2), were used. The differential expression pattern between sensitive and MTX-resistant cells was determined by whole human genome microarrays and analyzed with the GeneSpring GX software package. Genes deregulated in common between the different cancer cell lines served to generate biological association networks using the Pathway Architect software. RESULTS: Dikkopf homolog-1 (DKK1) is a highly interconnected node in the network generated with genes in common between the two colon cancer cell lines, and functional validations of this target using small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) showed a chemosensitization toward MTX. Members of the UDP-glucuronosyltransferase 1A (UGT1A) family formed a network of genes differentially expressed in the two breast cancer cell lines. siRNA treatment against UGT1A also showed an increase in MTX sensitivity. Eukaryotic translation elongation factor 1 alpha 1 (EEF1A1) was overexpressed among the pancreatic cancer, leukemia and osteosarcoma cell lines, and siRNA treatment against EEF1A1 produced a chemosensitization toward MTX. CONCLUSIONS: Biological association networks identified DKK1, UGT1As and EEF1A1 as important gene nodes in MTX-resistance. Treatments using siRNA technology against these three genes showed chemosensitization toward MTX.

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AbstractAlthough the genomes from any two human individuals are more than 99.99% identical at the sequence level, some structural variation can be observed. Differences between genomes include single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), inversion and copy number changes (gain or loss of DNA). The latter can range from submicroscopic events (CNVs, at least 1kb in size) to complete chromosomal aneuploidies. Small copy number variations have often no (lethal) consequences to the cell, but a few were associated to disease susceptibility and phenotypic variations. Larger re-arrangements (i.e. complete chromosome gain) are frequently associated with more severe consequences on health such as genomic disorders and cancer. High-throughput technologies like DNA microarrays enable the detection of CNVs in a genome-wide fashion. Since the initial catalogue of CNVs in the human genome in 2006, there has been tremendous interest in CNVs both in the context of population and medical genetics. Understanding CNV patterns within and between human populations is essential to elucidate their possible contribution to disease. But genome analysis is a challenging task; the technology evolves rapidly creating needs for novel, efficient and robust analytical tools which need to be compared with existing ones. Also, while the link between CNV and disease has been established, the relative CNV contribution is not fully understood and the predisposition to disease from CNVs of the general population has not been yet investigated.During my PhD thesis, I worked on several aspects related to CNVs. As l will report in chapter 3, ! was interested in computational methods to detect CNVs from the general population. I had access to the CoLaus dataset, a population-based study with more than 6,000 participants from the Lausanne area. All these individuals were analysed on SNP arrays and extensive clinical information were available. My work explored existing CNV detection methods and I developed a variety of metrics to compare their performance. Since these methods were not producing entirely satisfactory results, I implemented my own method which outperformed two existing methods. I also devised strategies to combine CNVs from different individuals into CNV regions.I was also interested in the clinical impact of CNVs in common disease (chapter 4). Through an international collaboration led by the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois (CHUV) and the Imperial College London I was involved as a main data analyst in the investigation of a rare deletion at chromosome 16p11 detected in obese patients. Specifically, we compared 8,456 obese patients and 11,856 individuals from the general population and we found that the deletion was accounting for 0.7% of the morbid obesity cases and was absent in healthy non- obese controls. This highlights the importance of rare variants with strong impact and provides new insights in the design of clinical studies to identify the missing heritability in common disease.Furthermore, I was interested in the detection of somatic copy number alterations (SCNA) and their consequences in cancer (chapter 5). This project was a collaboration initiated by the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research and involved other groups from the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, the CHUV and Universities of Lausanne and Geneva. The focus of my work was to identify genes with altered expression levels within somatic copy number alterations (SCNA) in seven metastatic melanoma ceil lines, using CGH and SNP arrays, RNA-seq, and karyotyping. Very few SCNA genes were shared by even two melanoma samples making it difficult to draw any conclusions at the individual gene level. To overcome this limitation, I used a network-guided analysis to determine whether any pathways, defined by amplified or deleted genes, were common among the samples. Six of the melanoma samples were potentially altered in four pathways and five samples harboured copy-number and expression changes in components of six pathways. In total, this approach identified 28 pathways. Validation with two external, large melanoma datasets confirmed all but three of the detected pathways and demonstrated the utility of network-guided approaches for both large and small datasets analysis.RésuméBien que le génome de deux individus soit similaire à plus de 99.99%, des différences de structure peuvent être observées. Ces différences incluent les polymorphismes simples de nucléotides, les inversions et les changements en nombre de copies (gain ou perte d'ADN). Ces derniers varient de petits événements dits sous-microscopiques (moins de 1kb en taille), appelés CNVs (copy number variants) jusqu'à des événements plus large pouvant affecter des chromosomes entiers. Les petites variations sont généralement sans conséquence pour la cellule, toutefois certaines ont été impliquées dans la prédisposition à certaines maladies, et à des variations phénotypiques dans la population générale. Les réarrangements plus grands (par exemple, une copie additionnelle d'un chromosome appelée communément trisomie) ont des répercutions plus grave pour la santé, comme par exemple dans certains syndromes génomiques et dans le cancer. Les technologies à haut-débit telle les puces à ADN permettent la détection de CNVs à l'échelle du génome humain. La cartographie en 2006 des CNV du génome humain, a suscité un fort intérêt en génétique des populations et en génétique médicale. La détection de différences au sein et entre plusieurs populations est un élément clef pour élucider la contribution possible des CNVs dans les maladies. Toutefois l'analyse du génome reste une tâche difficile, la technologie évolue très rapidement créant de nouveaux besoins pour le développement d'outils, l'amélioration des précédents, et la comparaison des différentes méthodes. De plus, si le lien entre CNV et maladie a été établit, leur contribution précise n'est pas encore comprise. De même que les études sur la prédisposition aux maladies par des CNVs détectés dans la population générale n'ont pas encore été réalisées.Pendant mon doctorat, je me suis concentré sur trois axes principaux ayant attrait aux CNV. Dans le chapitre 3, je détaille mes travaux sur les méthodes d'analyses des puces à ADN. J'ai eu accès aux données du projet CoLaus, une étude de la population de Lausanne. Dans cette étude, le génome de plus de 6000 individus a été analysé avec des puces SNP et de nombreuses informations cliniques ont été récoltées. Pendant mes travaux, j'ai utilisé et comparé plusieurs méthodes de détection des CNVs. Les résultats n'étant pas complètement satisfaisant, j'ai implémenté ma propre méthode qui donne de meilleures performances que deux des trois autres méthodes utilisées. Je me suis aussi intéressé aux stratégies pour combiner les CNVs de différents individus en régions.Je me suis aussi intéressé à l'impact clinique des CNVs dans le cas des maladies génétiques communes (chapitre 4). Ce projet fut possible grâce à une étroite collaboration avec le Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois (CHUV) et l'Impérial College à Londres. Dans ce projet, j'ai été l'un des analystes principaux et j'ai travaillé sur l'impact clinique d'une délétion rare du chromosome 16p11 présente chez des patients atteints d'obésité. Dans cette collaboration multidisciplinaire, nous avons comparés 8'456 patients atteint d'obésité et 11 '856 individus de la population générale. Nous avons trouvés que la délétion était impliquée dans 0.7% des cas d'obésité morbide et était absente chez les contrôles sains (non-atteint d'obésité). Notre étude illustre l'importance des CNVs rares qui peuvent avoir un impact clinique très important. De plus, ceci permet d'envisager une alternative aux études d'associations pour améliorer notre compréhension de l'étiologie des maladies génétiques communes.Egalement, j'ai travaillé sur la détection d'altérations somatiques en nombres de copies (SCNA) et de leurs conséquences pour le cancer (chapitre 5). Ce projet fut une collaboration initiée par l'Institut Ludwig de Recherche contre le Cancer et impliquant l'Institut Suisse de Bioinformatique, le CHUV et les Universités de Lausanne et Genève. Je me suis concentré sur l'identification de gènes affectés par des SCNAs et avec une sur- ou sous-expression dans des lignées cellulaires dérivées de mélanomes métastatiques. Les données utilisées ont été générées par des puces ADN (CGH et SNP) et du séquençage à haut débit du transcriptome. Mes recherches ont montrées que peu de gènes sont récurrents entre les mélanomes, ce qui rend difficile l'interprétation des résultats. Pour contourner ces limitations, j'ai utilisé une analyse de réseaux pour définir si des réseaux de signalisations enrichis en gènes amplifiés ou perdus, étaient communs aux différents échantillons. En fait, parmi les 28 réseaux détectés, quatre réseaux sont potentiellement dérégulés chez six mélanomes, et six réseaux supplémentaires sont affectés chez cinq mélanomes. La validation de ces résultats avec deux larges jeux de données publiques, a confirmée tous ces réseaux sauf trois. Ceci démontre l'utilité de cette approche pour l'analyse de petits et de larges jeux de données.Résumé grand publicL'avènement de la biologie moléculaire, en particulier ces dix dernières années, a révolutionné la recherche en génétique médicale. Grâce à la disponibilité du génome humain de référence dès 2001, de nouvelles technologies telles que les puces à ADN sont apparues et ont permis d'étudier le génome dans son ensemble avec une résolution dite sous-microscopique jusque-là impossible par les techniques traditionnelles de cytogénétique. Un des exemples les plus importants est l'étude des variations structurales du génome, en particulier l'étude du nombre de copies des gènes. Il était établi dès 1959 avec l'identification de la trisomie 21 par le professeur Jérôme Lejeune que le gain d'un chromosome supplémentaire était à l'origine de syndrome génétique avec des répercussions graves pour la santé du patient. Ces observations ont également été réalisées en oncologie sur les cellules cancéreuses qui accumulent fréquemment des aberrations en nombre de copies (telles que la perte ou le gain d'un ou plusieurs chromosomes). Dès 2004, plusieurs groupes de recherches ont répertorié des changements en nombre de copies dans des individus provenant de la population générale (c'est-à-dire sans symptômes cliniques visibles). En 2006, le Dr. Richard Redon a établi la première carte de variation en nombre de copies dans la population générale. Ces découvertes ont démontrées que les variations dans le génome était fréquentes et que la plupart d'entre elles étaient bénignes, c'est-à-dire sans conséquence clinique pour la santé de l'individu. Ceci a suscité un très grand intérêt pour comprendre les variations naturelles entre individus mais aussi pour mieux appréhender la prédisposition génétique à certaines maladies.Lors de ma thèse, j'ai développé de nouveaux outils informatiques pour l'analyse de puces à ADN dans le but de cartographier ces variations à l'échelle génomique. J'ai utilisé ces outils pour établir les variations dans la population suisse et je me suis consacré par la suite à l'étude de facteurs pouvant expliquer la prédisposition aux maladies telles que l'obésité. Cette étude en collaboration avec le Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois a permis l'identification d'une délétion sur le chromosome 16 expliquant 0.7% des cas d'obésité morbide. Cette étude a plusieurs répercussions. Tout d'abord elle permet d'effectuer le diagnostique chez les enfants à naître afin de déterminer leur prédisposition à l'obésité. Ensuite ce locus implique une vingtaine de gènes. Ceci permet de formuler de nouvelles hypothèses de travail et d'orienter la recherche afin d'améliorer notre compréhension de la maladie et l'espoir de découvrir un nouveau traitement Enfin notre étude fournit une alternative aux études d'association génétique qui n'ont eu jusqu'à présent qu'un succès mitigé.Dans la dernière partie de ma thèse, je me suis intéressé à l'analyse des aberrations en nombre de copies dans le cancer. Mon choix s'est porté sur l'étude de mélanomes, impliqués dans le cancer de la peau. Le mélanome est une tumeur très agressive, elle est responsable de 80% des décès des cancers de la peau et est souvent résistante aux traitements utilisés en oncologie (chimiothérapie, radiothérapie). Dans le cadre d'une collaboration entre l'Institut Ludwig de Recherche contre le Cancer, l'Institut Suisse de Bioinformatique, le CHUV et les universités de Lausanne et Genève, nous avons séquencés l'exome (les gènes) et le transcriptome (l'expression des gènes) de sept mélanomes métastatiques, effectués des analyses du nombre de copies par des puces à ADN et des caryotypes. Mes travaux ont permis le développement de nouvelles méthodes d'analyses adaptées au cancer, d'établir la liste des réseaux de signalisation cellulaire affectés de façon récurrente chez le mélanome et d'identifier deux cibles thérapeutiques potentielles jusqu'alors ignorées dans les cancers de la peau.

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Different signatures of natural selection persist over varying time scales in our genome, revealing possible episodes of adaptative evolution during human history. Here, we identify genes showing signatures of ancestral positive selection in the human lineage and investigate whether some of those genes have been evolving adaptatively in extant human populations. Specifically, we compared more than 11,000 human genes with their orthologs inchimpanzee, mouse, rat and dog and applied a branch-site likelihood method to test for positive selection on the human lineage. Among the significant cases, a robust set of 11 genes were then further explored for signatures of recent positive selection using SNP data. We genotyped 223 SNPs in 39 worldwide populations from the HGDP Diversity panel and supplemented this information with available genotypes for up to 4,814 SNPs distributed along 2 Mb centered on each gene. After exploring the allele frequency spectrum, population differentiation and the maintainance of long unbroken haplotypes, we found signals of recent adaptative phenomena in only one of the 11 candidate gene regions. However, the signal ofrecent selection in this region may come from a different, neighbouring gene (CD5) ratherthan from the candidate gene itself (VPS37C). For this set of positively-selected genes in thehuman lineage, we find no indication that these genes maintained their rapid evolutionarypace among human populations. Based on these data, it therefore appears that adaptation forhuman-specific and for population-specific traits may have involved different genes.

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BACKGROUND: The need for an integrated view of data obtained from high-throughput technologies gave rise to network analyses. These are especially useful to rationalize how external perturbations propagate through the expression of genes. To address this issue in the case of drug resistance, we constructed biological association networks of genes differentially expressed in cell lines resistant to methotrexate (MTX). METHODS: Seven cell lines representative of different types of cancer, including colon cancer (HT29 and Caco2), breast cancer (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-468), pancreatic cancer (MIA PaCa-2), erythroblastic leukemia (K562) and osteosarcoma (Saos-2), were used. The differential expression pattern between sensitive and MTX-resistant cells was determined by whole human genome microarrays and analyzed with the GeneSpring GX software package. Genes deregulated in common between the different cancer cell lines served to generate biological association networks using the Pathway Architect software. RESULTS: Dikkopf homolog-1 (DKK1) is a highly interconnected node in the network generated with genes in common between the two colon cancer cell lines, and functional validations of this target using small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) showed a chemosensitization toward MTX. Members of the UDP-glucuronosyltransferase 1A (UGT1A) family formed a network of genes differentially expressed in the two breast cancer cell lines. siRNA treatment against UGT1A also showed an increase in MTX sensitivity. Eukaryotic translation elongation factor 1 alpha 1 (EEF1A1) was overexpressed among the pancreatic cancer, leukemia and osteosarcoma cell lines, and siRNA treatment against EEF1A1 produced a chemosensitization toward MTX. CONCLUSIONS: Biological association networks identified DKK1, UGT1As and EEF1A1 as important gene nodes in MTX-resistance. Treatments using siRNA technology against these three genes showed chemosensitization toward MTX.

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Gene transfer in eukaryotic cells and organisms suffers from epigenetic effects that result in low or unstable transgene expression and high clonal variability. Use of epigenetic regulators such as matrix attachment regions (MARs) is a promising approach to alleviate such unwanted effects. Dissection of a known MAR allowed the identification of sequence motifs that mediate elevated transgene expression. Bioinformatics analysis implied that these motifs adopt a curved DNA structure that positions nucleosomes and binds specific transcription factors. From these observations, we computed putative MARs from the human genome. Cloning of several predicted MARs indicated that they are much more potent than the previously known element, boosting the expression of recombinant proteins from cultured cells as well as mediating high and sustained expression in mice. Thus we computationally identified potent epigenetic regulators, opening new strategies toward high and stable transgene expression for research, therapeutic production or gene-based therapies.

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The past decade has seen the emergence of next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies, which have revolutionized the field of human molecular genetics. With NGS, significant portions of the human genome can now be assessed by direct sequence analysis, highlighting normal and pathological variants of our DNA. Recent advances have also allowed the sequencing of complete genomes, by a method referred to as whole genome sequencing (WGS). In this work, we review the use of WGS in medical genetics, with specific emphasis on the benefits and the disadvantages of this technique for detecting genomic alterations leading to Mendelian human diseases and to cancer.

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There is great scientific and popular interest in understanding the genetic history of populations in the Americas. We wish to understand when different regions of the continent were inhabited, where settlers came from, and how current inhabitants relate genetically to earlier populations. Recent studies unraveled parts of the genetic history of the continent using genotyping arrays and uniparental markers. The 1000 Genomes Project provides a unique opportunity for improving our understanding of population genetic history by providing over a hundred sequenced low coverage genomes and exomes from Colombian (CLM), Mexican-American (MXL), and Puerto Rican (PUR) populations. Here, we explore the genomic contributions of African, European, and especially Native American ancestry to these populations. Estimated Native American ancestry is 48% in MXL, 25% in CLM, and 13% in PUR. Native American ancestry in PUR is most closely related to populations surrounding the Orinoco River basin, confirming the Southern American ancestry of the Taíno people of the Caribbean. We present new methods to estimate the allele frequencies in the Native American fraction of the populations, and model their distribution using a demographic model for three ancestral Native American populations. These ancestral populations likely split in close succession: the most likely scenario, based on a peopling of the Americas 16 thousand years ago (kya), supports that the MXL Ancestors split 12.2kya, with a subsequent split of the ancestors to CLM and PUR 11.7kya. The model also features effective populations of 62,000 in Mexico, 8,700 in Colombia, and 1,900 in Puerto Rico. Modeling Identity-by-descent (IBD) and ancestry tract length, we show that post-contact populations also differ markedly in their effective sizes and migration patterns, with Puerto Rico showing the smallest effective size and the earlier migration from Europe. Finally, we compare IBD and ancestry assignments to find evidence for relatedness among European founders to the three populations.

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Background It is well known that the pattern of linkage disequilibrium varies between human populations, with remarkable geographical stratification. Indirect association studies routinely exploit linkage disequilibrium around genes, particularly in isolated populations where it is assumed to be higher. Here, we explore both the amount and the decay of linkage disequilibrium with physical distance along 211 gene regions, most of them related to complex diseases, across 39 HGDP-CEPH population samples, focusing particularly on the populations defined as isolates. Within each gene region and population we use r2 between all possible single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) pairs as a measure of linkage disequilibrium and focus on the proportion of SNP pairs with r2 greater than 0.8. Results Although the average r2 was found to be significantly different both between and within continental regions, a much higher proportion of r2 variance could be attributed to differences between continental regions (2.8% vs. 0.5%, respectively). Similarly, while the proportion of SNP pairs with r2 > 0.8 was significantly different across continents for all distance classes, it was generally much more homogenous within continents, except in the case of Africa and the Americas. The only isolated populations with consistently higher LD in all distance classes with respect to their continent are the Kalash (Central South Asia) and the Surui (America). Moreover, isolated populations showed only slightly higher proportions of SNP pairs with r2 > 0.8 per gene region than non-isolated populations in the same continent. Thus, the number of SNPs in isolated populations that need to be genotyped may be only slightly less than in non-isolates. Conclusion The 'isolated population' label by itself does not guarantee a greater genotyping efficiency in association studies, and properties other than increased linkage disequilibrium may make these populations interesting in genetic epidemiology.

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Information gained from the human genome project and improvements in compound synthesizing have increased the number of both therapeutic targets and potential lead compounds. This has evolved a need for better screening techniques to have a capacity to screen number of compound libraries against increasing amount of targets. Radioactivity based assays have been traditionally used in drug screening but the fluorescence based assays have become more popular in high throughput screening (HTS) as they avoid safety and waste problems confronted with radioactivity. In comparison to conventional fluorescence more sensitive detection is obtained with time-resolved luminescence which has increased the popularity of time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer (TR-FRET) based assays. To simplify the current TR-FRET based assay concept the luminometric homogeneous single-label utilizing assay technique, Quenching Resonance Energy Transfer (QRET), was developed. The technique utilizes soluble quencher to quench non-specifically the signal of unbound fraction of lanthanide labeled ligand. One labeling procedure and fewer manipulation steps in the assay concept are saving resources. The QRET technique is suitable for both biochemical and cell-based assays as indicated in four studies:1) ligand screening study of β2 -adrenergic receptor (cell-based), 2) activation study of Gs-/Gi-protein coupled receptors by measuring intracellular concentration of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cell-based), 3) activation study of G-protein coupled receptors by observing the binding of guanosine-5’-triphosphate (cell membranes), and 4) activation study of small GTP binding protein Ras (biochemical). Signal-to-background ratios were between 2.4 to 10 and coefficient of variation varied from 0.5 to 17% indicating their suitability to HTS use.

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Human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) are the result of ancient germ cell infections of human germ cells by exogenous retroviruses. HERVs belong to the long terminal repeat (LTR) group of retrotransposons that comprise ~8% of the human genome. The majority of the HERVs documented have been truncated and/or incurred lethal mutations and no longer encode functional genes; however a very small number of HERVs seem to maintain functional in making new copies by retrotranspositon as suggested by the identification of a handful of polymorphic HERV insertions in human populations. The objectives of this study were to identify novel insertion of HERVs via analysis of personal genomic data and survey the polymorphism levels of new and known HERV insertions in the human genome. Specifically, this study involves the experimental validation of polymorphic HERV insertion candidates predicted by personal genome-based computation prediction and survey the polymorphism level within the human population based on a set of 30 diverse human DNA samples. Based on computational analysis of a limited number of personal genome sequences, PCR genotyping aided in the identification of 15 dimorphic, 2 trimorphic and 5 fixed full-length HERV-K insertions not previously investigated. These results suggest that the proliferation rate of HERVKs, perhaps also other ERVs, in the human genome may be much higher than we previously appreciated and the recently inserted HERVs exhibit a high level of instability. Throughout this study we have observed the frequent presence of additional forms of genotypes for these HERV insertions, and we propose for the first time the establishment of new genotype reporting nomenclature to reflect all possible combinations of the pre-integration site, solo-LTR and full-length HERV alleles.

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This article examines the current legal regime applicable to animal-human combinations under the Assisted Human Reproduction Act (Canada). The Act prohibits as criminal offences the use of non-human reproductive material in humans, the use in humans of human reproductive material previously transplanted into a non-human life form, the creation of chimeras made from human embryos, and the creation for reproductive purposes of human/non-human hybrids. Additional animal-human combinations, such as transgenic life forms, may be regulated pursuant to section 11 of the Act in the future. The underlying concerns of the Act in establishing this regime appear to be the protection of human health and safety, human dignity and individuality, and the human genome. The Act seems calibrated to prohibit the creation of animal-human combinations that are currently unsafe and scientifically and ethically problematic, while leaving open the possibility of regulating other such combinations with more immediate scientific potential, although these also raise ethical questions. Currently, certain differences subsist in Canada between what is permissible for researchers and institutions funded by federal agencies and those in privately funded research. The development of the regulatory framework under the Act will reveal how freedom of research will be balanced against the need for scientifically valid and ethically justifiable research, and whether these differences will continue to apply.

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The human gut microbiota comprises a diverse microbial consortium closely co-evolved with the human genome and diet. The importance of the gut microbiota in regulating human health and disease has however been largely overlooked due to the inaccessibility of the intestinal habitat, the complexity of the gut microbiota itself and the fact that many of its members resist cultivation and are in fact new to science. However, with the emergence of 16S rRNA molecular tools and "post-genomics" high resolution technologies for examining microorganisms as they occur in nature without the need for prior laboratory culture, this limited view of the gut microbiota is rapidly changing. This review will discuss the application of molecular microbiological tools to study the human gut microbiota in a culture independent manner. Genomics or metagenomics approaches have a tremendous capability to generate compositional data and to measure the metabolic potential encoded by the combined genomes of the gut microbiota. Another post-genomics approach, metabonomics, has the capacity to measure the metabolic kinetic or flux of metabolites through an ecosystem at a particular point in time or over a time course. Metabonomics thus derives data on the function of the gut microbiota in situ and how it responds to different environmental stimuli e. g. substrates like prebiotics, antibiotics and other drugs and in response to disease. Recently these two culture independent, high resolution approaches have been combined into a single "transgenomic" approach which allows correlation of changes in metabolite profiles within human biofluids with microbiota compositional metagenomic data. Such approaches are providing novel insight into the composition, function and evolution of our gut microbiota.