Title: What is a SNP
1What is a SNP?
2Lecture topics
- What is a SNP?
- What use are they?
- SNP discovery
- SNP genotyping
- Introduction to Linkage Disequilibrium
3Readings in the text
4Recognizing Heterozygotes for a SNP
5SNPs
- Non-Coding (5 or 3 UTR, regulatory regions or
inter-genic) - Coding
- Synonymous
- Non-Synonymous (Replacement)
- Non-coding, and synonymous SNPs may be functional
6Haplotypes An Introduction
- A distinct collection of a number of (usually
bi-allelic) SNPs along a gene (or chromosome
region) - Certain alleles may segregate together
- Much more on this next lecture
7(No Transcript)
8Why are we interested in SNPs?
- Population genetics (population demography and
evolution - Quantitative Genetics (mapping allelic variants
causing diseases) - We often only use the SNPs as markers, and we
are not interested in them in particular
9A little Population Genetics
- What causes SNPs to be maintained in a
population? Why do they vary? - Mutation vs. Drift (Neutral)
- Positive or purifying selection (fixation)
- Balancing Selection
- Ps and qs
- Hardy Weinberg Equilibrium
10SNP discovery
- Currently re-sequencing is the major method for
SNP discovery - This can be coupled with database searches for
putative SNPs that need to be verified - One major challenge is the frequency of the rare
alleles - P 1 (1-p)2N
11Genotyping methods
- New methods are developing at an extremely rapid
pace - Cost, efficiency and error rate must all be
considered carefully - Depending upon the question, and organism being
utilized, different approaches may be useful
(Drosphila vs. humans)
12Recognizing Heterozygotes for a SNP
13PCR-Restriction Fragment Length polymorphism
(RFLP)
Also known as Cleaved Amplified Polymorphic
Sequence (CAPS)
Wild Type CTCACTCTCACGCGCATACACAGTGAAATGTAAACACC
Mutant CTCACTCTCACGCGCACACACAGTGAAATGTAAACA
CC
DraIII Recognition site CACNNNGTG
Wild Type CTCACTCTCACGCGCATACACAGTGAAATGTAAACACC
Mutant CTCACTCTCACGCGCACACACAGTGAAATGTAAACA
CC
Mutant cuts, wild type does not
14But, what if there is no restriction site???
- You make one of course!!!
- Derived CAPS (dCAPS)
- Using Primer mismatch, you engineer a restriction
site - Depending upon the length of your primer, the
difference - in size between the two fragments is
usually 20 bp.
15ASO (Figure 5.20)
Allele Specific oligo-hybridization
16Single Base Extension (SBE)
17Pyro-sequencing (5.23)