Finding the genetic causes for complex diseases is a challenge. Expression studies have
shown that the level of expression of many genes is altered in disease compared
with normal conditions, but what lies behind these changes? Linkage studies
provide hints as to where in the genome the genetic triggers – the mutations
– might be located. Fine-mapping and association studies can give yet more
information about which genes, and which changes in the genes, are involved
in the disease. Recent examples show that single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs),
which are variations at the single-nucleotide level within an individual's
DNA, in the regulatory regions of some genes constitute susceptibility factors
in many complex diseases. This article discusses the nature of regulatory SNPs
(rSNPs) and techniques for their functional validation, and looks towards what
rSNPs can tell us about complex diseases.