Title: PharmacoGenomics
1DNA chip Usage
PharmacoGenomics personalized medicine.
Alina Starovolsky
2SNP snip Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms
One-letter variations in the DNA sequence. SNPs
contribute to differences among individuals. The
majority have no effect, others cause subtle
differences in countless characteristics,
including risk for certain diseases.
3Human genome diversity
- 28 of the human genome are coding genes. (all
the rest is junk DNA). - 1.4 are the exons.
- 30,000 genes.
- 40 of then have alterative splicing and thus
there are more genes.
4- A multi-country effort (Japan, the United
Kingdom, Canada, China, Nigeria, and the United
States) to identify and catalog genetic
similarities and differences in human beings. -
- Analyzing DNA from populations with African,
Asian, and European ancestry. Together, these DNA
samples should enable HapMap researchers to
identify most of the common haplotypes that exist
in populations worldwide
5Polymorphism vs. mutation
- Polymorphism is defined as a variation in more
than 1 of the population. - Mutations Rare differences which occur in less
than 1 of the population (usually much less than
1). - Typically, mutations have been discovered in
coding sequences of genes causing rare inherited
diseases. - In Barley (?????) 1 out of 131 nucleotides is
different between individuals (was calculated on
75 different genes). - In 4 types of chickens in comparison to their
ancestor it was found that every 200 nucleotides
there is an SNP.
6Polymorphism in humans
- Two random humans are expected to differ at
approximately 1 in 1000 nucleotide pairs, whereas
two random chimpanzees differ at 1 in 500
nucleotide pairs. - This is interpreted to mean that the human
species is relatively young, perhaps too young to
evolve subspecies. - However, with a geonome of approximate 3 billion
nucleotides, on average two humans differ at
approximately 3 million nucleotides. - Most of these SNPs are neutral, but some are
functional and influence the phenotypic
differences between humans. It is estimated that
about 10 million SNPs exist in human populations. - Amino acid-altering non-synonymous coding-region
SNPs would be rare and harder to be found because
of expected selection against them in human
evolution.
7Pharmacogenomics Medicine tailored to the
individual
- The Study of how genetic differences influence
variability in patients responses to drugs. - Personalized drugs.
8 SNPs rool
- Genetic polymorphisms in drug-metabolizing
enzymes, transporters, receptors, and other drug
targets have been linked to inter-individual
differences in the efficacy and toxicity of many
medications. - Pharmacogenomic studies explain the inherited
nature of these differences in drug disposition
and effects. -
9The DNA Chip
10SNP Genotyping
- Using DNA chips, it is possible to measure many
thousands of SNPs simultaneously in a small
sample from a patient. - Can compare genotypes for SNP markers linked to
virtually any trait.
11Examples traits complex and non complex
diseases.
- There are a number of classic genetic diseases
caused by mutations of a single gene. - There are also many diseases that are the result
- of the interactions of many genes
- Athsma, heart disease, cancer.
- Each of these genes may be considered to be a
risk factor for the disease. - Groups of SNP markers may be associated with a
disease without determining mechanism. - Pharmacogenomics
- personalized drugs.
12The Future
Soon it will be able to profile variations
between individuals DNA to predict responses to
a particular medicine. It will provide
information on the likelihood of efficacy and
safety of a drug for an individual patient It
Will change the practice and economics of
medicine (Faster clinical trials. Less drug side
effects.)
13The roots of pharmacogenetics
Clinical observations of inherited differences in
drug effects first documented in the 1950s. e.g.
In African American population it was found that
in response to the anti-malarial drug primaquine,
they developed hemolyitic anemia due to
polymorphic alleles of Glucose-6-phosphate
dehydrogenase. D-glucose 6-phosphate NADP
D-glucono-1,5-lactone 6-phosphate NADPH
(energy). Without enough normal G6PD to help red
blood cells get rid of harmful oxidative
substances, they can be damaged or destroyed,
leading to a condition known as hemolytic anemia.
14Cytochrome P450
The molecular genetic basis for the inherited
traits began to be revealed in the late 1980s,
with the initial cloning and characterization of
a polymorphic human gene encoding the
drug-metabolizing enzyme debrisoquin hydroxylase
(CYP2D6).
- Homozygousity for alleles of the Cytochrome P450
gene CYP2D6 (in 10 of the Caucasian
population) lead to dangerous vacular
hypotension when receiving the hypertension drug
debrisoquine.
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18About schizophrenia
- Does not mean split personality!
- Afflicts approximately 1 of the worlds
population. - US spends 40 billion per year.
- MF for rate, onset male(15-25),
female(25-35). - 10 of the people with the disorder commit
suicide. - Wide spectrum of illness Characterized by two
categories of symptoms - - positive symptoms
- - negative symptoms
19- Negative symptoms
- Flattened emotional response.
- Lack of initiative and persistence.
- Anhedonia (inability to experience pleasure).
- Social withdrawal.
-
- Positive symptoms
- (more responsive to drug treatment)
- Thought disorders.
- Delusions.
- Hallucinations.
- disorganized speech. (e.g. frequent incoherence)
- grossly disorganized or catatonic behavior.
20What causes schizophrenia?
- The Genetic Risk known to run in the family
Each of the genetically identical girls was to
become schizophrenic before the age of 28
21What causes schizophrenia?
- Viral infection in the 2nd trimester of pregnancy
- Brain abnormality (enlarged lateral ventricles,
low metabolic rate of the prefrontal cortex,
abnormal cell arrange in the hippocampus).
Usually correlated to negative symptoms - Social influence highest in poor socioeconomic
groups, stressful live events.
22What causes schizophrenia?
- The Gray matter is the cortex of the brain which
contains nerve cells body.
parietal lobe logic
hearing
23What causes schizophrenia?
- Biochemistry - dopamine hypothesis - dopamine
levels increase in the brain. (Dopamine is a
neurotransmitter that transports signals between
nerve endings in the brain). - (antipsychotic drugs dopamine antagonists,
L-dopa, cocaine, amphetamine) only effective
only for the positive symptoms.
24Dopamine D2 receptor
- Found on chromosome 11q22-23
- Binding site of many psychoactive drugs
- Chlorpromazine
25ANTIPSYCHOTIC DRUGS
TYPICAL
ATYPICAL
D2 Receptor
Other dopamine receptors and 5HT2 receptor
Treat mainly positive symptom Efficacy 60
Treat negative symptoms too, Efficacy 85(less
relapses)
26THE PHARMACOGENOMIC HYPOTHESIS DRUG EFFICACY
RELEATE TO GENETIC REASONS
- Drug mechanism- identify how drug works
block dopamine receptors - Target identify those gene products implicated
in the mechanism of the drug Dopamine
receptor - Candidate gene identify the gene that have been
found to be associated with the disease
DRD2 receptor (dopamine receptor D2 ). - Gene variants 141 C Del/Ins, TaqI A
27141C Del/Ins polymorphism
- deletion of cytosine 141 in the promoter region
upstream from the transcription start site - Associated with schizophrenia in Japanese,
Swedish and Portuguese population - In vitro del allele is directly
- related to DRD2 expression
- Individuals with no del allele
- had lower striatal density of
- dopamine receptor
28TaqI polymorphism
- localized 9.5 kb downstream from the DRD2 gene
- restriction fragment length polymorphism creating
A1 and A2 allels - A1 allele -lower density of DRD2 in the caudate
nuclei and striaum - A2 allele - decrease in the binding potential of
the D2 receptor - Controversy about the linkage to schizophrenia
29Wu S,. Xing Q,. Gao R,. Li X, Gu N,. Feng G,. He
L. (2005).Response to chlorpromazine treatment
may be associated with polymorphisms of the DRD2
gene in Chinese schizophrenic patients. Neurosci
Lett. 376(1)1-4.
30Purpose of the study examine whether the DRD2
gene contribute to the therapeutic effect of
chlorpromazine in schizophrenia by investigating
the potential genetic role of the 141C Ins/Del
and TaqIA polymorphism in the DRD2 gene
- Patients - Chinese population
- - mean age 27.3
- - 2 or more characteristic
symptoms - according to the DSM 3R
(Diagnostic and Statistical manual of Mental
Disorder ). - - first time to be treated with
- chlorpromazine
- - 8 weeks of treatment
- Assessment clinical symptoms were evaluated
- by BPRS (brief psychiatric
rating scale) by two psychiatrics (given no
information about the patients genotype).
31Results 1 the frequency of Dell allele is
higher in non responders than in responders
P0.01
32Results 2 no association between A1 allele and
the drug response
NO SIGNIFICANT RESULTS!
33conclusion
- Del allele of the 141C Ins/Del polymorphism
might predict therapeutic response to
chlorpromazine in schizophrenia probably due to
alteration of the D2 receptor density but that
the A1 allele of the TaqI A polymorphism have no
such effect
Higher density of the D2 receptor
low therapeutic response to chlorpromazine
Del allele
34- Other studies
- (Suzuki A, Kondo T, Mihara K, Yasui-Furukori N,
Ishida M, Furukori H, Kaneko S, Inoue Y, Otani
K.(2001).The -141C Ins/Del polymorphism in the
dopamine D2 receptor gene promoter region is
associated with anxiolytic and antidepressive
effects during treatment with dopamine
antagonists in schizophrenic patients.
Pharmacogenetics. 11(6)545-50) - Arranz, M.J., Li, T., Liu, X., Murray, R.
Collier, D.A. Kerwin, R.W.(1998). Lack of
association between a polymorphism in the
promoter region of the dopamine-2 receptor gene
and clozapine response. Pharmacogenetics.
8(6)481-4.
35Advantages Disadvantages
- Diagnosis-systematized
- investigators blinded to the patient genotype
- Prior medical treatment
- Dont separate positive from negative symptoms
36Non small cell lung cancer - NSCLC
Lung carcinoma is the Leading cause of cancer
deths in the USA and worldwide for both men and
women.
37Multi-center trial of EGFR inhibitor to treat
advanced lung cancer (NSCLC)
- Rationale
- EGFR (epidermal growth factor receptor)
over-expressed in lung cancers (and other). - EGFR inhibitors block signal transduction and
cell proliferation - Gefitinib A drug that targets the ATP cleft
within the EGFR. - Design
- 210 patients from Europe, Australia, South
Africa, Japan - Objective tumor response in 19 of patients -
mean survival 8 months - Response better among Japanese vs non-Japanese
pts - (27.5 vs. 10.4 response P 0.002)
- Response also better among female pts,
adenocarcinoma pts, pts with prior
hormonal/immuno treatment, pts with less
morbidity - What is molecular basis of the differential
response?
38Lung cancer - EGFR inhibitors EGFR somatic
mutation
Lynch TJ, Bell DW, Sordella R, Gurubhagavatula S,
Okimoto RA, Brannigan BW, Harris PL, Haserlat SM,
Supko JG, Haluska FG, Louis DN, Christiani DC,
Settleman J, Haber DA. Activating mutations in
the epidermal growth factor receptor underlying
responsiveness of non-small-cell lung cancer to
gefitinib. N Engl J Med 3502129-2139, 2004
Paez JG, Janne PA, Lee JC, Tracy S, Greulich H,
Gabriel S, Herman P, Kaye FJ, Lindeman N, Boggon
TJ, Naoki K, Sasaki H, Fujii Y, Eck MJ, Sellers
WR, Johnson BE, Meyerson M. EGFR mutations in
lung cancer correlation with clinical response
to gefitinib therapy. Science 3041497-500, 2004
39Activating mutations in EGFR underlying
responsiveness of lung cancer to gefitinib
- EGFR sequenced in pre-treatment tumor tissue
from - 9 responders (tumors that were available), 7
non-responders, 25 untreated patients
Example of improvement after 6 weeks treatment
40Most of them were women, had never smoked, and
had bronchoalveolar tumors
41Overlap AA 747-750
8 out of the 9 patients that were checked for
mutations in the tumors and responded to
gefitinib had deletions in the tumor cells. And
in 7 patients with no response no mutations were
observed. (plt0.001)
42Overlap
43EGFR mutations in lung cancer Correlation with
clinical response to gefitinib therapy. Science
3041497, 2004
119 primary lung tumors (58 Japan, 61 US), none
treated before, EGFR somatic mutations in 15/58
(26) of Japanese pts vs 1/61 (2) of US pts.
Among adenocarcinomas only, mutations in 14/41
(32) of Japanese pts vs. 1/29 (3) of US pts
44EGFR mutations in lung cancer Correlation with
clinical response to gefitinib therapy. Science
3041497, 2004
Pre-treatment tumors from treated patients 6
responders, 4 non-responders
45EGFR mutations in lung cancer Correlation with
clinical response to gefitinib therapy. Science
3041497, 2004
exon 21
exon 18
exon 19
Sequence and substitutions alterations at kinase
active site.
46EGFR mutations in lung cancer Correlation with
clinical response to gefitinib therapy. Science
3041497, 2004
47EGFR mutations in lung cancer Correlation with
clinical response to gefitinib therapy. Science
3041497, 2004
Mutations may stabilize interaction of EGFR with
both ATP (enhancing phosphorylation) and with
competitive inhibitor geftinib -gt both enhanced
inhibition by drug.
48 In general Collect Drug Response Data
- These drug response phenotypes are associated
with a set of specific gene alleles. - Identify populations of people who show specific
responses to a drug. - In early clinical trials, it is possible to
identify people who react well and react poorly.
49 Make Genetic Profiles
- Scan these populations with a large number of SNP
markers. - Find markers linked to drug response phenotypes.
- It is interesting, but not necessary, to identify
the exact genes involved.
50Profiles
51Use the Profiles - Summary
- Genetic profiles of new patients can then be used
to prescribe drugs more effectively avoid
adverse reactions. - Can also speed clinical trials by testing on
those who are likely to respond well.
52Impact on Bioinformatics
- Genomics produces high-throughput, high-quality
data, and bioinformatics provides the analysis
and interpretation of these massive data sets. - It is impossible to separate genomics laboratory
technologies from the computational tools
required for data analysis.
53Debate
Will it be economical to develop medications and
dosages for only a subset of the population?