Title: Pharmacogenetics
1Pharmacogenetics
- Definition and introduction
- Relevance to medicine
- Post-genomic approaches to studying
pharmacogenetics - SNP detection
2Promise of Pharmacogenetics in Post-Genome Era
- Completion of human genome variation between
individuals are lt0.1 (3M bp) - Hypothesis variations in genome account for
individual responses to drugs - Optimized medicines for individuals
- Reduction in adverse drug reactions
- Expedient development of new drugs
3Pharmacogenetics
- Definition (modern)
- Study of variability in the responses of
different patients to drugs and medicines - Broad definition
- pharmakon- magic charm, drug, poison
- Any biologically active material originating from
outside of the body (xenobiotic vs. endobiotic)
4Pharmacogenetics in Nature
- Environmental toxicogenetics
- Insecticide/herbicide resistance in agriculture
- Antibiotic resistance in microbes
5Pharmacogenetics
It is an advantage to a species to be
biochemically diverse for such species will
contain at least some members capable of
resisting any particular pestilence. Haldan
e, 1949
6Human exposure to natural toxins
- St. Anthonys Fire in Middle Ages
- Ergot intoxification, gangrene of hands and feet
- Mold poisoning in England, 1500-1830
- Low fertility, high mortality
- After 1830, diet changed from grains to potatoes
- Unlike viral or bacterial outbreaks, adaptive
immunity is not acquired resistance to toxins
require genetic changes over generations
7Resistance of DTT in houseflies
- DTT led to resistance within a few generations
- DTT resistance associated with slower development
of larvae - Resistant strains were lost without DTT selection
- Genetically stable DTT resistance required 30
generations of selection
8Antibiotic resistance in bacteria
- Resistance detected to all clinically relevant
antibiotics - Resistance mechanisms conferred by chromosomal
mutations/changes or more commonly,
multi-resistance R-plasmids - Most antibiotics are derived from fungal or
bacterial products
9Biological cost of variation
- If a mutation confers resistance to a toxin, why
is it not maintained or expaanded in a
population? - Concept of Balanced polymorphisms
- Explanation for high frequency of certain genetic
variants - Gene variant may be detrimental in homozygous
double dose but confers increased fitness in
heterozygotes - Frequency of variant reflects the balance between
heterozygote advantagea and homozygote
disadvantage
10Balance polymorphisms Sickle cell anemia
- Most famous SNP, mutation in hemoglobin gene
- Children with homozygous mutation die early
- Heterozygous adult have enhanced survival to
malaria - Sickle gene variant only stays in areas with
malaria
11Neutral mutations vs. balanced polymorhphisms
- If a new mutation is disadvantageous, it will
tend to be eliminated quickly by selective forces - It is only possible to expect new mutations to
survive in a population if effects are neutral or
mildy disadvantageous - Neutral mutations represents the only viable
mechanisms for mutations to be maintained as a
reserve of variation against unforeseen needs
12Types of SNPs and their frequency
Type Description Number (in
1000s) I Coding, non- synonymous,
non-conservative 60-100 II Coding, non-
synonymous, conservative 100-180 III Coding,
synonymous 200-240 IV Non-coding,
5-UTR 140 V Non-coding, 3-UTR 300 VI Oth
er non-coding gt1000
13Pharmacogenetics Practice of medicine
If it were not for the great variability among
individuals Medicine might as well be a science
and not an art. Sir William Osler, 1892
14Classical Pharmacogenetics enzymology,
biochemistry and population genetics
- Variability in patients responses could be
related to differences in the activities of
drug-metabolizing enzymes - About 20-30 enzymes can interact with nearly
every chemical to which the body is exposed - Metabolizing enzymes, receptors, drug transport
systems - Variants of these enzymes may represent deficient
or excessive metabolizing activities - Variants often showed ethnic-biased distributions
(Fig.1)
15Molecular Pharmacogenetics Cytochrome P450
- multi-gene family, CYP2D6 is one of best studied
- 70 variant alleles of CYD2D6 known
- Variants encode for non-functional enzymes, poor
metabolisers, and ultra-rapid metabolisers - Table 1
16Monogenic vs. Gaussian Variations
Monogenic All-or-none function in affected
gene Mendelian inheritance Examples Sickle
cell, CYP2D6, Cystic fibrosis, Rb
Gaussian or polygenic Function of affection gene
shows a range that is defined by ED50 Multiple
gene variation involved Accounts for majority of
variations in drug responses Disease
Susceptibility Alzheimers disease ApoE4,
ApoE2 (19q13), 12q
17SNP Mutation vs. Polymorphism
- Definitions are arbitrary
- Gene mutations are rare, lt1 of population
- Gene polymorphisms exist in gt1
- SNPs exists about every 1000 bases, ie.
3,000,000/genome
18How to use SNPs to measure drug responses?
- SNP linkage disequilibrium profiles
- With no prior knowledge of genetic involvement,
analysis of 500,000 SNPs is required for whole
genome association study
19Functional Genomics Approaches to Pharmacogenetics
- Proteomics, mass-spec., protein chips
- Microarrays for mRNA expression profiling
- Proteins, need to assay for function
- mRNA expression is indirect readout of underlying
genomic variation, at best
20SNP Identification
- Genome sequencing of individuals
- Dense SNP maps develop around disease
susceptibility loci - SNP Consortium, 800,000 identified by 2001
- Many SNPs from genome efforts
- SNPs needed from different ethnic populations
21SNP Detection Standard Methods
- All methods rely on PCR amplification of locus
surrounding SNP - Different methodologies used to identify the
sequence at the SNP - Direct sequencing
- SSCP, single-standed conformation polymorphism
- Throughput of 100s-1000s per day
22SNP Detection High throughput PCR
- Realtime PCR using Taqman probes
- Realtime PCR using Molecular beacons
- Realtime PCR using melt curve analysis
- Closed tube, walk-away assays
- ABI7900, 384-well robot feeder
- Throughput of 1,000s per day
23SNP Detection Microarrays
- Affymetrix SNP-specific oligo arrays
- Multiplex of 6000 PCR reactions of each sample
- Hybridize to arrays, high level of redunndancy
- Throughput of 6000 per day per sample
24SNP Detection Minisequencing/SBE on microarray
- Multiplex PCR of each sample, T7 tagged
- Make cRNA
- Hybridize to oligo arrays
- Each oligo is allele-specific
- Single base extension (SBE) with RT using labeled
nucleotide
25SNP detection SBE on Tag arrays
- Multiplex PCR of each sample
- SBE with Taged-primer and allele-spefic labeled
nucleotide - Hybridize the labeled Tag-primer to Tag array
- Tag arrays have 32,000 unique tags (20mer)
26SNP Detection Bead-based Fiber Optics Arrays
- Optical fibre has inner ring and outer
ring/cladding - Light transmission occurs by bouncing internally
- To produce a fibre-DNA sensor array
- Etch core to create well
- Bundle fibres to form thread
- 5000-50,000 fibres, each 3-7 uM
- total diameter of 300-1000 um
27Bead-based Fiber Optics Arrays
- To create the beads/microspheres
- Polystyrene beads, 3 um, must be registered or
coded by entrapping unique proportions of 2
different dyes - Add DNA-probe by
- Direct synthesis of oligonucleotide for gene X on
bead - Coat with avidin and add biotin-DNA probe for
gene X - Repeat for each probe required
- Add pool of encoded beads to fibre optic array
28Bead-based Fiber Optics Arrays
- Disadvantages
- Random Poisson distribution
- of beads incorporated in an array
- Every array is unique and must decoded each time
- Each oligo and/or bead must be
- synthesized separately, unlike
- combinatorial synthesis
-
-
- Advantages
- High level of redundancy
- Reusuable (gt100 times)
- Sensitivity 100 better lower
- limit than microarrays, no PCR
- Small sample size, dip fibre into plate with lt5
ul - Scalability 1ml bead preparation of 20 slurry
contains 1010 beads - Fibre threads, up to 50,000
29How will SNPs improve drug development
- Optimized medicines for individuals
- Indicate best choice from different available
drugs - Reduction in adverse drug reactions
- Currently, 6.7 of inpatients suffer adverse
reaction - 4th-6th leading cause of death for inpatients
- Expedient development of new drugs
- Successful drug may have efficacy of 20
30Integration of SNP analysis with clinical trials
Phase I Safety/Tolerance 500,000 SNPs Phase
II Efficacy in small group 500,000 SNPs (20
response) Phase III Efficacy in large
group 50,000 SNPs (20 response)
31Applications of SNP analysis
- Genetic linkage analysis for disease
susceptibility - A individuals genotype is stable
- Limitations influence of environmental factors
are not reflected in genome/SNPs
32Summary
- Genetic variability is essential for species
survival - Unprecedented depth of genetic analyses in
post-genomic era - Immediate challenges in building technological
tools and bioinformatics