INTERNATIONAL CONSORTIUM COMPLETES MAP OF HUMAN GENETIC VARIATION

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U.S. Department of Health and Human Services 
NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH 
NIH News 
National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)
http://www.genome.gov/

EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE: Wednesday, October 26, 2005, 1:00 p.m. ET

CONTACT: Geoff Spencer, NHGRI, 301 520-5279, 391 492-0911,
spencerg@xxxxxxxxxxxx
 
INTERNATIONAL CONSORTIUM COMPLETES MAP OF HUMAN GENETIC VARIATION
New Tool Speeding the Discovery of Genes for Common Diseases

SALT LAKE CITY, Wed., Oct. 26, 2005 -- The International HapMap
Consortium today published a comprehensive catalog of human genetic
variation, a landmark achievement that is already accelerating the
search for genes involved in common diseases, such as asthma, diabetes,
cancer and heart disease.

In a paper in the Oct. 27 issue of the journal "Nature", more than 200
researchers from Canada, China, Japan, Nigeria, the United Kingdom and
the United States describe the initial results from their public-private
effort to chart the patterns of genetic variation that are common in the
world's population. The results provide overwhelming evidence that
variation in the human genome is organized into local neighborhoods,
called haplotypes, which usually are inherited as intact blocks of
information.

At the project's outset in October 2002, the consortium set an ambitious
goal of creating a human haplotype map, or HapMap, within three years.
The "Nature" paper marks the attainment of that goal with its detailed
description of the Phase I HapMap, consisting of more than 1 million
markers of genetic variation, called single nucleotide polymorphisms
(SNPs). The consortium is also nearing completion of the Phase II HapMap
that will contain nearly three times more markers than the initial
version and will enable researchers to focus their gene searches even
more precisely on specific regions of the genome.

"This represents a milestone for medical research. Built upon the
foundation laid by the human genome sequence, the HapMap provides a
powerful new tool for exploring the root causes of common diseases. Such
understanding is required for researchers to develop new and much-needed
approaches to prevent, diagnose and treat diseases, such as diabetes,
bipolar disorder, cancer and many others, " said David Altshuler, M.D.,
Ph.D., of The Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT in Cambridge, Mass.,
who along with Peter Donnelly, Ph.D., of the University of Oxford in
England are the paper's corresponding authors.

Any two unrelated people are 99.9 percent identical at the genetic
level. However, it is important to understand the 0.1 percent difference
because it can help explain why one person is more susceptible to a
disease or responds differently to a drug or an environmental factor
than another person.

The HapMap shows the neighborhoods of correlated genetic variation, or
haplotypes, across the entire human genome. With these haplotypes
defined, HapMap provides an efficient method for choosing "tag SNPs"
that captures the genetic variation in each neighborhood with a minimum
amount of work. By using HapMap data to compare the SNP patterns of
people affected by a disease with those of unaffected people,
researchers can survey genetic variation across the whole genome and
identify genetic contributions to common diseases far more efficiently
than is possible with traditional approaches.

"The HapMap is a phenomenal tool that is making possible research that
was impractical, if not unimaginable, only a few years ago," said Yusuke
Nakamura, M.D., Ph.D., director of the University of Tokyo's Human
Genome Center, as well as leader of the RIKEN SNP Center and the
Japanese group working on the HapMap. "It offers the scientific
community an enormous savings, reducing the expense of searching the
genome for hereditary factors in common disease by a factor of 10 to
20."

Gene hunters around the world have been quick to recognize the potential
of the HapMap, tapping into its publicly available SNP datasets even
before the first draft of the map was completed. For example, in studies
published in March in the journal "Science", scientists used HapMap data
to uncover a genetic variation that substantially increases the risk of
age-related macular degeneration, the leading cause of severe vision
loss in the elderly. The discovery of this single spelling variant out
of the 3 billion letter DNA instruction book for humans, which affects a
gene that codes for a protein involved in inflammation, points the way
for development of better diagnostic tests and treatments for this
debilitating disease.

Many other discoveries lie on the horizon as the HapMap empowers studies
of other common diseases, including diabetes, Alzheimer's disease,
cancer, schizophrenia, asthma, hypertension and heart disease. In fact,
more than 70 papers and presentations related to the HapMap are on the
program for this week's meeting of the American Society of Human
Genetics in Salt Lake City.

In addition to assisting in the identification of genetic factors
involved in disease, the HapMap can help to pinpoint genetic variations
that may affect the response of people to medications, toxic substances
and environmental factors. Such information can be used to help doctors
prescribe the right drug in the right dose for each patient, as well as
recommend prevention strategies that take into account individuals'
varying responses to environmental factors, such as diet. Also, the
HapMap may be used to find genetic factors that contribute to good
health, such as those protecting against infectious diseases or
promoting longevity.

Still, the consortium members caution the research community not to jump
to conclusions too quickly when using HapMap data to facilitate their
genome-wide searches for genes associated with human health and disease.
"Rigorous standards of statistical significance will be needed to avoid
a flood of false positive results," they write in their paper. To avert
such problems, they urge their scientific colleagues to confirm any gene
"discovery" by replicating the findings in independent studies that use
the same set of SNP markers in different groups of people with the same
disease or condition.

Researchers produced the HapMap using DNA from blood samples collected
from 269 volunteers from widely distributed geographic regions.
Specifically, the samples came from Yoruba in Ibadan, Nigeria; Japanese
in Tokyo, Han Chinese in Beijing and Utah residents with ancestry from
northern and western Europe. No medical or personal identifying
information was obtained from the donors. However, the samples are
identified by the population from which they were collected.

"We have devoted much effort to making sure this project is done as
ethically and transparently as possible. Following the precedent set by
the Human Genome Project, we have weighed the ethical, legal and social
implications of this research from the outset," said Bartha M. Knoppers,
J.D., Ph.D., of the University of Montreal. "For example, we developed a
very careful community engagement and sampling strategy to ensure that
participants from all the different population groups could give full
informed consent. Still, we know our job is far from over and we stand
ready to address whatever ethical, legal and social issues may arise in
the future."

In addition to its intended function as a resource for studies of human
health and disease, the Phase I HapMap has yielded fascinating clues
into how our species evolved over time and specific forces that were
important as the human population spread around the globe.

Genetic diversity in humans is increased by recombination, which is the
swapping of DNA from the maternal and paternal lines. It has been
recently realized that in humans, most such swapping occurs primarily at
a limited number of "hotspots" in the genome. By analyzing the HapMap
data, the researchers have produced a genome-wide inventory of where
recombination takes place. This will enable more detailed studies of
this fundamental property of inheritance, as well as serve to improve
the design of genetic studies of disease.

The HapMap consortium found that genes involved in immune response and
neurological processes are more diverse than those for DNA repair, DNA
packaging and cell division. Researchers speculate the difference might
be explained by natural selection shaping in the human population in
ways that favor increased diversity for genes that influence the body's
interactions with the environment, such as those involved in immune
response, and that do not favor changes in genes involved in core
cellular processes. 

As expected, the vast majority of both rare and common patterns of
genetic variation were found in all of the populations studied. However,
the consortium did find evidence that a very small subset of human
genetic variation may be related to selection pressures related to
geographic or environmental factors, such as microorganisms that cause
infectious diseases. This evidence appears as significant differences in
genetic variation patterns in particular genomic regions among the
populations studied. While more follow-up study is needed to explore the
differences, researchers say some of the most striking examples merely
serve to confirm well-known genetic differences among populations, such
as the Duffy blood group, which plays a role in response to malaria, and
the lactase gene, which influences the ability to digest milk products.

All in all, across the 1 million SNPs surveyed, researchers found only
five exclusive, or "fixed," differences on human's 22 pairs of non-sex
(autosomal) chromosomes between the Yoruba samples and the Japanese and
Han Chinese samples; 11 between the Yoruba samples and the samples from
Utah residents of northern and western European ancestry; and 21 between
the Utah samples and the Japanese and Han Chinese samples.

The International HapMap Consortium is a public-private partnership of
scientists and funding agencies from Canada, China, Japan, Nigeria, the
United Kingdom and the United States. The U.S. component of the $138
million international project is led by the National Human Genome
Research Institute (NHGRI) on behalf of the 20 institutes, centers and
offices of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) that contributed
funding.

"Like the Human Genome Project before it, the key to the International
HapMap Project's success lies in the shared vision and hard work of
hundreds of researchers from many different nations and many different
disciplines," said NHGRI Director Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D., who
led the U.S. component of the Human Genome Project and served as the
project manager for HapMap. "Each member of the consortium is to be
commended for helping to create this outstanding public resource for
exploring the genetic components of human health and disease."

As was the case with all of the data generated by the Human Genome
Project, HapMap data are being made swiftly and freely available in
public databases. Researchers can access this data through the HapMap
Data Coordination Center (www.hapmap.org), the NIH-funded National
Center for Biotechnology Information's dbSNP
(http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/SNP/index.html) and the JSNP Database in
Japan (http://snp.ims.u-tokyo.ac.jp/).

Phase II of the HapMap, for which the data has already been generated
and analysis is getting underway, will be an even more powerful tool
than the Phase I version described in the "Nature" paper. Taking
advantage of the high-throughput genotyping capacity of Perlegen
Sciences, Inc., of Mountain View, Calif., Phase II is adding 2.6 million
additional SNPs to the HapMap and then testing virtually the entire
known catalog of human variation on the HapMap samples.

"Our participation in this collaborative effort underscores the private
sector's enthusiasm for the HapMap and its potential as a tool for the
understanding of disease. The Phase II map will make it even easier for
researchers to correlate genetic variation with gene function, which is
crucial for developing therapies tailored to each person's genetic
make-up," said Kelly A. Frazer, Ph.D., vice president of genomics at
Perlegen.

NHGRI is one of 27 institutes and centers at the NIH, an agency of the
Department of Health and Human Services. The NHGRI Division of
Extramural Research supports grants for research and for training and
career development at sites nationwide. Additional information about
NHGRI can be found at its Web site, www.genome.gov.

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) -- "The Nation's Medical
Research Agency" -- includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a
component of the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is
the primary Federal agency for conducting and supporting basic,
clinical, and translational medical research, and it investigates the
causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For
more information about NIH and its programs, visit http://www.nih.gov.
  
##
 
This NIH News Release is available online at:
http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/oct2005/nhgri-26.htm.

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