Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Haplotype-specific linkage disequilibrium patterns define the genetic topography of the human MHC

2003; Oxford University Press; Volume: 12; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1093/hmg/ddg066

ISSN

1460-2083

Autores

Tariq Ahmad, Matt J. Neville, Sara E. Marshall, Alessandro Armuzzi, K. Mulcahy‐Hawes, Jonathan Crawshaw, Hiroe Sato, Khoon‐Lin Ling, Martin Barnardo, Sue Goldthorpe, Robert Walton, Mike Bunce, Derek P. Jewell, Ken I. Welsh,

Tópico(s)

Genetic Associations and Epidemiology

Resumo

Detailed knowledge of linkage disequilibrium (LD) is regarded as a prerequisite for population-based disease gene mapping. Variable patterns across the human genome are now recognized, both between regions and populations. Here, we demonstrate that LD may also vary within a genomic region in a haplotype-specific manner. In 864 Caucasian unrelated individuals, we describe haplotype-specific LD patterns across the human MHC by the construction of gene-specific allelic haplotypes at 25 loci between HLA-A and Tapasin. Strong and extensive LD is found across both common and rare haplotypes, suggesting that haplotype structure is influenced by factors other than genetic drift, including both selection and differential haplotype recombination. Knowledge of haplotype-specific LD in the HLA may explain the apparent discrepant data from previous studies of global LD, help delineate key areas in mapping HLA-associated diseases and, together with recombination data, provide valuable information about a population's demographic history and the selective pressures operating on it.

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