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. 2018 Dec 3;62(5):643–723. doi: 10.1042/EBC20170053

Figure 28. The principles of genetic association.

Figure 28

SNP1 (with alleles C and T) and SNP2 (with alleles A and G) are two polymorphic sites present on one chromosome. Within one of the group of ancestors, a new mutation (yellow star) has occurred very close to the position of SNP1; this is a new pathogenic variant which contributes to a particular disease condition (yellow individual). Because SNP1 is so close to the pathogenic variant, there will be little or no recombination between these sites down the generations, whereas recombination is likely to occur between SNP2 and the pathogenic variant. Thus when the descendants are genotyped, SNP2 has identical allele distribution in both healthy and affected individuals (no association of SNP2 with the disease). However, for SNP1 there is an excess of the T allele (and a corresponding deficit in the C allele) in the affected population, in other words SNP1 shows association with the disease. In reality, for complex conditions where there may be many different predisposing variants in several different genes, the scale of association would be less extreme, requiring analysis of thousands of individuals.