| Literature DB >> 18466439 |
Tian Zheng1, Shuang Wang, Lei Cong, Yuejing Ding, Iuliana Ionita-Laza, Shaw-Hwa Lo.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The mRNA expression levels of genes have been shown to have discriminating power for the classification of breast cancer. Studying the heritability of gene expression levels on breast cancer related transcripts can lead to the identification of shared common regulators and inter-regulation patterns, which would be important for dissecting the etiology of breast cancer.Entities:
Year: 2007 PMID: 18466439 PMCID: PMC2367474 DOI: 10.1186/1753-6561-1-s1-s10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Proc ISSN: 1753-6561
Figure 1Association and linkage scans for 18 breast cancer related transcripts. Black curves are LOD scores from the linkage scans with the height of each row standardized by LOD = 5 and red dotted reference lines indicating LOD = 3. Top 30 SNPs with the strongest overall (blue ticks) and interaction (red ticks) association signal for a given expression trait are marked. A green triangle points out the genome alignment locus of the given expression sequence of that row, while gray dots are alignment loci of other breast cancer related expression sequences (including those were not studied in this paper).
Figure 2Transcription hotspots identified by linkage and association scans. Linkage, the numbers of times that a SNP has LOD > 1.44 (nominal p-value = 0.01) for a transcript were counted and plotted as black vertical lines. Association, the numbers of times that a SNP is one of the top 30 association SNPs for a transcript were counted. The SNP-by-SNP transcription hotspots pattern is noisy. To have a clear pattern, these counts were aggregated into bins of ≤5 cM by chromosomes as in Morley et al. [4]. Bins with ≥5 genetic regulators identified (p = 4 × 10-3) were identified as eQTL hotspots (blue dotted lines are the selection thresholds).
Figure 3Hierarchical clustering of transcripts. Clustering is based on the phenotype (expression values), common interacting loci pairs, qGTD return frequencies, and overall return frequencies.