| Article | Gaëlle Debret, Camille Jung, Jean-Pierre Hugot, Leigh Pascoe, Jean-Marc Victor and Annick Lesne, Genetic Susceptibility to a Complex Disease: The Key Role of Functional Redundancy | Abstract | Complex diseases involve both a genetic component and a response to
environmental factors or lifestyle changes. Recently, genome-wide association studies
(GWAS) have succeeded in identifying hundreds of polymorphisms that are statistically
associated with complex diseases. However, the association is usually weak and none of
the associated allelic forms is either necessary or sufficient for the disease occurrence. We
argue that this promotes a network view, centred on functional redundancy. We adapted
reliability theory to the concerned sub-network, modelled as a parallel array of functional
modules. In our model, as long as one module remains active, the function correlated with
the respective disease is ensured and disease does not occur. Genetic factors reduce the
initial number of available modules while environment, contingent surroundings, personal
history, epigenetics, and some intrinsic stochasticity influence their persistence time. This
model reproduces age-specific incidence curves and explains the influence of environmental
changes. It offers a new paradigm, according to which disease occurs due to a lack of
functional elements, depending on many idiosyncratic factors. Genetic risk assessed from
GWAS is only a statistical notion with no direct interpretation at the individual level.
However, genomic profiling could be useful at population level in devising models to guide
decisions in health care policy.
(Acronyms: CD Crohn’s disease; GWAS genome-wide association studies; SNP single
nucleotide polymorphism) | Keywords | Genetic susceptibility, genome-wide association studies, gene-environment
interaction, biological networks, redundancy, reliability theory | please login to download article | | Back to Contents >> | | Back to Home >> |
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