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Co-segregation and linkage analysis in humans

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if close together, the frequency (%) of recombination will be low and they will ... if far apart, a crossover will occur in every (or nearly every) meiosis and they ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Co-segregation and linkage analysis in humans


1
Co-segregation and linkage analysis in humans
  • Genetic map metric cM percent recombination
  • Recombination a new combination of alleles
  • Independent assortment is 50 recombination
  • so yes! unlinked genes recombine!

2
Genes on the same chromosome
  • Are syntenic (on the same thread)
  • Are physically linked
  • May or may not be genetically linked
  • if close together, the frequency () of
    recombination will be low and they will be
    genetically linked
  • if far apart, a crossover will occur in every (or
    nearly every) meiosis and they will exhibit 50
    recombination - unlinked

3
The phase problem - key to assessing
recombination
  • Remember co-segregation traveling together
    through the generations (through meioses)
  • must determine what comes in and what goes
    out from an individual
  • The evaluation of whether a gene allele
    combination is recombinant or not is founded on
    knowledge of the linkage phase

4
Linkage phase - essential for determination of
recombination
  • Generally, need information across 3 generations
    (grandparents, parents, offspring)
  • Haplotype linear array of alleles
  • An informative meiosis is one where we can
    identify the gamete haplotype and whether or not
    it is recombinant

5
Special problems for human recombination analysis
  • Small families (small sibships), not all matings
    are informative
  • Therefore, must combine data across unrelated
    families and estimate lod score
  • relative likelihood (odds) of obtaining the
    observed data when 2 loci are linked at a set
    recombination fraction (theta) compared to being
    unlinked
  • test data at various theta values
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