| Literature DB >> 26868259 |
Nurul Syazana Mohamad Shah1, Iman Salahshourifar2, Sarina Sulong3, Wan Azman Wan Sulaiman4, Ahmad Sukari Halim5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nonsyndromic orofacial clefts are one of the most common birth defects worldwide. It occurs as a result of genetic or environmental factors. This study investigates the genetic contribution to nonsyndromic cleft lip and/or palate through the analysis of family pedigrees. Candidate genes associated with the condition were identified from large extended families from the Malay population.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26868259 PMCID: PMC4751652 DOI: 10.1186/s12863-016-0345-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genet ISSN: 1471-2156 Impact factor: 2.797
Fig. 1Family pedigree of three or four generations. Family tree of eight large extended families with orofacial clefts, including both affected and non-affected used in genome-wide linkage analysis
Linkage intervals with NPL score > 2 in each family determined using both the human genetic maps
| Family | Chromosome | NPL | SNP | Position cM | Physical position |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 | 1p31.1-34.2 | 2.40 | rs697590 | 82.65 | 42609867–61803889 |
| 2q34-q36.3 | 2.49 | rs1851328 | 213.99 | 211045482–227886773 | |
| 9q21.13-q22.2 | 2.47 | rs2839899 | 75.60 | 77502160–93206737 | |
| 58 | 4p15.2-p16.1 | 2.98 | rs123043 | 31.84 | 8063501–25312357 |
| 4q31.3-q33 | 2.04 | rs4318612 | 158.9 | 154887604–170939829 | |
| 5p14.1-p15.33 | 3.15 | rs13161353 | 41.15 | 601647–28733753 | |
| 5q14.1-q14.3 | 3.11 | rs1566629 | 97.97 | 78829249–83307587 | |
| 6p11.2-12.3 | 3.17 | rs1925154 | 80.06 | 56104522–56239724 | |
| 14q12 | 3.12 | rs7160965 | 28.00 | 26751099–31733642 | |
| 16q12.1 | 2.56 | rs1420533 | 63.60 | 52529714–52563626 | |
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| rs400382 | 101.29 | 81898744–82364429 |
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| rs7602656 | 201.47 | 174680163–216195171 | |
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| rs1002207 | 186.26 | 180689841–181554568 | |
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| rs1464890 | 130.88 | 106088278–131180918 | |
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| rs2245832 | 101.69 | 94159583–111354022 | |
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| rs4584574 | 38.59 | 11655268–31535355 | |
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| rs722952 | 63.99 | 85656778–86230913 | |
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| rs179562 | 26.78 | 24977594–38778344 | |
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| rs174345 | 2.47 | 17553499–18033199 |
Significant NPL scores > 3.60 at various loci found in family 100 are highlighted in bold
Fig. 2Genome-wide multipoint NPL plot for family 100. The suggestive threshold (NPL score between 2.20 and 3.50) at the genome-wide level is indicated by a red horizontal line. The significant threshold (NPL score > 3.60) is indicated by a blue horizontal line. Significant NPL scores between 3.67 and 3.68, with p < 0.05 on chromosome 1, 13 and 22 were obtained for family 100. This linkage data was analysed using Easy Linkage Plus v5.08 software implemented by Hoffmann and Lindner (2005)
Linkage intervals with LOD score > 2 in each family using both the Illumina 6K linkage 24 deCODE human genetic map and AFFY 100k Marshfield human sex-averaged
| Family | Chromosome | LOD | SNP | Position cM |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 99 | 3q13.3-13.33 | 2.03 | rs1398748 | 120.04 |
| 100 | 2.12 | rs437749 | 107.64 | |
| 1p31.1 | 2.16 | rs400382 | 101.29 | |
| 2q31.2 | 2.18 | rs1002207 | 186.26 | |
| 2q32.1 | 2.18 | rs6754252 | 188.90 | |
| 2q33.3 | 2.12 | rs7602656 | 201.47 | |
| 8q22.1 | 2.12 | rs2245832 | 101.69 | |
| 11p15.1 | 2.12 | rs730348 | 31.78 |