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Genome Med. 2009 Jun 29;1(6):65.

Using prior knowledge and genome-wide association to identify pathways involved in multiple sclerosis.

Ritchie MD.

Department of Molecular Physiology & Biophysics, Center for Human Genetics Research, Vanderbilt University, 519 Light Hall, Nashville, TN 37232-0700, USA. ritchie@chgr.mc.vanderbilt.edu.

Abstract

ABSTRACT : The efforts of the Human Genome Project are beginning to provide important findings for human health. Technological advances in the laboratory, particularly in characterizing human genomic variation, have created new approaches for studying the human genome - genome-wide association studies (GWAS). However, current statistical and computational strategies are taking only partial advantage of this wealth of information. In the quest for susceptibility genes for complex diseases in GWAS data, several different analytic strategies are being pursued. In a recent report, Baranzini and colleagues used a pathway- and network-based analysis to explore potentially interesting single locus association signals in a GWAS of multiple sclerosis. This and other pathway-based approaches are likely to continue to emerge in the GWAS literature, as they provide a powerful strategy to detect important modest single-locus effects and gene-gene interaction effects.

PMID: 19566917 [PubMed - in process]PMCID: PMC2703874Free PMC Article

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