| Literature DB >> 11686872 |
Abstract
Asthma is the most common chronic childhood disease in the developed nations, and is a complex disease that has high social and economic costs. Studies of the genetic etiology of asthma offer a way of improving our understanding of its pathogenesis, with the goal of improving preventive strategies, diagnostic tools, and therapies. Considerable effort and expense have been expended in attempts to detect specific polymorphisms in genetic loci contributing to asthma susceptibility. Concomitantly, the technology for detecting single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) has undergone rapid development, extensive catalogues of SNPs across the genome have been constructed, and SNPs have been increasingly used as a method of investigating the genetic etiology of complex human diseases. This paper reviews both current and potential future contributions of SNPs to our understanding of asthma pathophysiology.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2001 PMID: 11686872 PMCID: PMC59575 DOI: 10.1186/rr45
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Selected web sites
| Title | Web address |
| dbSNP Polymorphism Repository | |
| GeneSNPs | |
| Genetic Annotation Initiative | |
| HGBase | |
| HUGO Mutation Database Initiative | |
| Human SNP Database | |
| SNP Consortium Database | |
| The Sanger Centre |
Sample size requirements for case–control analyses of single nucleotide polymorphisms
| Dominant model | Recessive model | |||||
| Exposure (%) | No. of cases required | Exposure (%) | No. of cases required | |||
| Allele frequency (%) | ||||||
| 10 | 19 | 430 | 711 | 1 | 6113 | 10,070 |
| 20 | 36 | 311 | 516 | 4 | 1,600 | 2,637 |
| 30 | 51 | 308 | 512 | 9 | 769 | 1,269 |
| 40 | 64 | 354 | 590 | 16 | 485 | 802 |
| 50 | 75 | 456 | 762 | 25 | 363 | 602 |
| 60 | 84 | 661 | 1,107 | 36 | 311 | 516 |
There were two controls per case; a detectable difference of OR is 1.5 or more; power = 80%. The allele frequencies shown are those in controls. Exposure (that is, prevalence) is that in controls assuming a diallelic locus with a dominant or recessive allele at Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium. In the dominant model, estimates are for an OR of 1.5 between cases and controls for the possession of at least one copy of disease-associated SNP by case; in the recessive model, estimates are for an OR of 1.5 between cases and controls for the possession of two copies of disease-associated SNP by case.