Abstract
Recent technological advancements allowing for large-scale sequencing efforts present an exciting opportunity to uncover the genetic underpinnings of complex diseases. In an attempt to characterize these genetic contributors to disease, investigators have embarked in multitude on what are commonly referred to as population-based genetic association studies. These studies generally aim to relate genetic sequence information derived from unrelated individuals to a measure of disease progression or disease status. The field of genomics spans a wide array of research areas that involve the many stages of processing from genetic sequence information to protein products and ultimately the expression of a trait. The breadth of genomic investigations also includes studies of multiple organisms, ranging from bacteria to viruses to parasites to humans. In this chapter, two settings are described in which population-based genetic association studies have marked potential for uncovering disease etiology while elucidating new approaches for targeted, individualized therapeutic interventions: (1) complex disease association studies in humans; and (2) studies involving the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV).
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