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Seeking genetic signature of radiosensitivity - a novel method for data analysis in case of small sample sizes
- Source :
- Theoretical Biology & Medical Modelling
- Publication Year :
- 2014
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2014.
-
Abstract
- Background The identification of polymorphisms and/or genes responsible for an organism's radiosensitivity increases the knowledge about the cell cycle and the mechanism of the phenomena themselves, possibly providing the researchers with a better understanding of the process of carcinogenesis. Aim The aim of the study was to develop a data analysis strategy capable of discovering the genetic background of radiosensitivity in the case of small sample size studies. Results Among many indirect measures of radiosensitivity known, the level of radiation-induced chromosomal aberrations was used in the study. Mathematical modelling allowed the transformation of the yield-time curve of radiation-induced chromosomal aberrations into the exponential curve with limited number of parameters, while Gaussian mixture models applied to the distributions of these parameters provided the criteria for mouse strain classification. A detailed comparative analysis of genotypes between the obtained subpopulations of mice followed by functional validation provided a set of candidate polymorphisms that might be related to radiosensitivity. Among 1857 candidate relevant SNPs, that cluster in 28 genes, eight SNPs were detected nonsynonymous (nsSNP) on protein function. Two of them, rs48840878 (gene Msh3) and rs5144199 (gene Cc2d2a), were predicted as having increased probability of a deleterious effect. Additionally, rs48840878 is capable of disordering phosphorylation with 14 PKs. In silico analysis of candidate relevant SNP similarity score distribution among 60 CGD mouse strains allowed for the identification of SEA/GnJ and ZALENDE/EiJ mouse strains (95.26% and 86.53% genetic consistency respectively) as the most similar to radiosensitive subpopulation Conclusions A complete step-by-step strategy for seeking the genetic signature of radiosensitivity in the case of small sample size studies conducted on mouse models was proposed. It is shown that the strategy, which is a combination of mathematical modelling, statistical analysis and data mining methodology, allows for the discovery of candidate polymorphisms which might be responsible for radiosensitivity phenomena.
- Subjects :
- Nonsynonymous substitution
Time Factors
In silico
Statistics as Topic
Normal Distribution
Health Informatics
Genome-wide association study
Single-nucleotide polymorphism
Biology
Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
Radiation Tolerance
Mice
Gene Frequency
Modelling and Simulation
Animals
Cluster Analysis
GWAS
SNP
mathematical modelling
Radiosensitivity
Phosphorylation
Allele frequency
Phylogeny
Chromosome Aberrations
Genetics
Models, Genetic
Research
data mining
Chromosomes, Mammalian
chromosomal abberations
Kinetics
Genetic Loci
radiosensitivity
Sample size determination
Sample Size
Modeling and Simulation
Female
polymorphisms
Protein Kinases
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 17424682
- Volume :
- 11
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Theoretical Biology and Medical Modelling
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....518c630eea93c50ae752d549bf3e8c75