Dr. Andrey Rzhetsky
The MIT Technology Review article Mapping Complex Diseases: A computer model of epidemiological data from 1.5 million people illuminates the genetic origins of many common diseases said
Certain diseases caused by single genetic mutations are correlated with other conditions in well-known ways, says Andrey Rzhetsky, the leader of the mapping project, who is now a professor of genetic medicine at the University of Chicago. For example, the same mutation in the gene for hemoglobin, the protein that carries oxygen in the blood, causes sickle-cell anemia but protects against malaria. Unlike sickle-cell anemia, however, most diseases aren’t caused by a single mutation. The genetic factors underlying most common diseases, such as diabetes, addiction, and heart disease, are complex and poorly understood. But Rzhetsky found connections between genetically complex diseases, too.
Using health records from the Columbia University Medical Center, Rzhetsky’s group examined the likelihood that a patient with one genetically complex disease — for example, diabetes — also had one of the 160 other diseases under study, such as an autoimmune disorder. The researchers concluded that certain groups of genes can predispose a person to multiple diseases, while others can predispose a person to one disease while protecting against another.
Andrey Rzhetsky, Ph.D. is Professor of Medicine, Section of Genetic
Medicine, The University of Chicago.
His research is focused on computational analysis of
signal-transduction pathways.
Andrey authored the software
STATIO: Program package for testing stationarity of base
composition and
Models: Program package for testing a data set for compatibility
with a model of nucleotide substitution, and
coauthored the software
METREE: Program package for inferring and testing minimum evolution
trees,
rRNA: Program package for rRNA analysis, and
GeneWays: a system for automatically extracting, analyzing,
visualizing and integrating molecular pathway data from the research
literature. This system focuses on interactions between molecular
substances and actions, providing a graphical consensus view on the
collected information.
He edited the book
Mathematical Hierarchies and Biology: Dimacs Workshop, November
13–15,
1996 (Dimacs Series in Discrete Mathematics and Theoretical Computer
Science), and
coauthored the publications
Probabilistic inference of molecular networks from noisy data
sources,
Listening to Viral Tongues: Comparing Viral Trees Using a Stochastic
Context-Free Grammar,
GeneWays: a system for extracting, analyzing, visualizing, and
integrating molecular pathway data,
Learning to predict protein-protein interactions from protein
sequences,
Automatically identifying gene/protein terms in MEDLINE
abstracts,
Birth and death of protein domains: A simple
model of evolution explains power law behavior,
Two biomedical sublanguages: a description based on the
theories of Zellig Harris, and
The human ATP-Binding cassette (ABC) transporter
superfamily.
Read his
full list of publications!
Andrey earned his MS in Mathematical Biology from the
Novosibirsk State University, Russia in 1985 and his Ph.D. in
Genetics
from the
Institute of Cytology and Genetics in 1990.
He did his postdoctoral work with Professor Masatoshi Nei at
Pennsylvania State University, developing models of nucleotide
substitution and algorithms for phylogenetic tree inference.