Genetic Predisposition
Based on your genetic markers, your predisposition to this trait is shown below
Your Result
Average levels of vitamin B6
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Scientific Evidence
Understanding the Data
- SNP: A specific genetic marker relevant to this trait (e.g., rs2588978)
- Genotype: Your genetic makeup at the given SNP location (e.g., CC)
- Variant allele: The alternative DNA sequence at the SNP site
- Variant allele frequency: Percentage of population carrying this variant
- Variant found: Whether the variant was detected in your DNA file
NBPF3 GeneCards
This gene is a member of the neuroblastoma breakpoint family (NBPF) which consists of dozens of recently duplicated genes primarily located in segmental duplications on human chromosome 1. This gene family has experienced its greatest expansion within the human lineage and has expanded, to a lesser extent, among primates in general. Members of this gene family are characterized by tandemly repeated copies of DUF1220 protein domains. DUF1220 copy number variations in human chromosomal region 1q21.1, where most DUF1220 domains are located, have been implicated in a number of developmental and neurogenetic diseases such as microcephaly, macrocephaly, autism, schizophrenia, cognitive disability, congenital heart disease, neuroblastoma, and congenital kidney and urinary tract anomalies. Altered expression of some gene family members is associated with several types of cancer. This gene family contains numerous pseudogenes. [provided by RefSeq, Feb 2013]
Genomic Location
Associated SNPs
| SNP | Genotype | Ref. Allele | Variant Allele | Frequency | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| rs4654748 | T T | C | T | 37.54% | Detected |
These are the genetic markers (SNPs) analyzed for this trait. Variations detected in your genome are listed under the "Genotype" column. SNPs showing "--" were not identified in your DNA file.
| SNP | Chromosome | Genotype | Variant Allele | Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| rs4654748 | 1 | TT | T | 37.54% |
The following peer-reviewed scientific studies support the genetic associations analyzed in this report.
What's Next?
Print Report
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