Associations between forensic loci and expression levels of neighboring genes may compromise medical privacy

Author:

Bañuelos Mayra M.123ORCID,Zavaleta Yuómi Jhony A.4,Roldan Alennie4,Reyes Rochelle-Jan4,Guardado Miguel1,Chavez Rojas Berenice4ORCID,Nyein Thet1,Rodriguez Vega Ana4ORCID,Santos Maribel4,Huerta-Sanchez Emilia23ORCID,Rohlfs Rori V.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mathematics, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA 94132

2. Ecology, Evolution and Organismal Biology, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912

3. Center for Computational and Molecular Biology, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912

4. Department of Biology, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA 94132

Abstract

A set of 20 short tandem repeats (STRs) is used by the US criminal justice system to identify suspects and to maintain a database of genetic profiles for individuals who have been previously convicted or arrested. Some of these STRs were identified in the 1990s, with a preference for markers in putative gene deserts to avoid forensic profiles revealing protected medical information. We revisit that assumption, investigating whether forensic genetic profiles reveal information about gene-expression variation or potential medical information. We find six significant correlations (false discovery rate = 0.23) between the forensic STRs and the expression levels of neighboring genes in lymphoblastoid cell lines. We explore possible mechanisms for these associations, showing evidence compatible with forensic STRs causing expression variation or being in linkage disequilibrium with a causal locus in three cases and weaker or potentially spurious associations in the other three cases. Together, these results suggest that forensic genetic loci may reveal expression levels and, perhaps, medical information.

Funder

NIH

Genentech Foundation

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference76 articles.

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4. E. E. Murphy, Inside the Cell (Nation Books, 2015).

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