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Mapping Approaches to Gene Identification in Humans
Authors:Raymond L White  Jean-Marc Lalouel  G Mark Lathrop  Mark F Leppert  Yusuke Nakamura  Peter O'Connell
Abstract:Although a number of human genes that cause disease have been traced through the defective product, most genetic defects are recognized only by phenotype. When the biochemical defect is unknown, a gene can be located only through molecular approaches based on coinheritance (genetic linkage) of the disease phenotype with a particular allele of a polymorphic DNA marker that has already been mapped to a specific chromosomal region. Linkage studies in affected families have already localized genes for several important diseases, including cystic fibrosis. Finding a genetic linkage in families in which a disease segregates requires that the human genetic map have a large number of polymorphic markers; when the map is dense enough, any disease gene can be located by linkage to a known marker. Many DNA segments with a high degree of polymorphism are being found and mapped as markers in normal reference pedigrees. Genetic linkage mapping has implications even broader than its application to prenatal diagnosis or therapeutic strategy; analyzing mutations in important genes will illuminate basic mechanisms in molecular biology and the early events that lead to cancer and other disorders.
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