8 research outputs found

    Association results of 593 CNVs to asthma.

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    <p>CNVs for association testing in the full Hutterite pedigree were identified in the 16 sequenced genomes. The points for these CNVs are colored based on the results of the whole-genome sequencing to represent whether the variant was observed in cases only (red), control individuals only (blue), or in both case and control individuals (gray). The genomic position is represented on the x-axis and the āˆ’log<sub>10</sub>(p-value) of the nominal association of each CNV to asthma in the full Hutterite pedigree is on the y-axis.</p

    Whole-Genome Sequencing of Individuals from a Founder Population Identifies Candidate Genes for Asthma

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    <div><p>Asthma is a complex genetic disease caused by a combination of genetic and environmental risk factors. We sought to test classes of genetic variants largely missed by genome-wide association studies (GWAS), including copy number variants (CNVs) and low-frequency variants, by performing whole-genome sequencing (WGS) on 16 individuals from asthma-enriched and asthma-depleted families. The samples were obtained from an extended 13-generation Hutterite pedigree with reduced genetic heterogeneity due to a small founding gene pool and reduced environmental heterogeneity as a result of a communal lifestyle. We sequenced each individual to an average depth of 13-fold, generated a comprehensive catalog of genetic variants, and tested the most severe mutations for association with asthma. We identified and validated 1960 CNVs, 19 nonsense or splice-site single nucleotide variants (SNVs), and 18 insertions or deletions that were out of frame. As follow-up, we performed targeted sequencing of 16 genes in 837 cases and 540 controls of Puerto Rican ancestry and found that controls carry a significantly higher burden of mutations in <i>IL27RA</i> (2.0% of controls; 0.23% of cases; nominal pā€Š=ā€Š0.004; Bonferroni pā€Š=ā€Š0.21). We also genotyped 593 CNVs in 1199 Hutterite individuals. We identified a nominally significant association (pā€Š=ā€Š0.03; Odds ratio (OR)ā€Š=ā€Š3.13) between a 6 kbp deletion in an intron of <i>NEDD4L</i> and increased risk of asthma. We genotyped this deletion in an additional 4787 non-Hutterite individuals (nominal pā€Š=ā€Š0.056; ORā€Š=ā€Š1.69). <i>NEDD4L</i> is expressed in bronchial epithelial cells, and conditional knockout of this gene in the lung in mice leads to severe inflammation and mucus accumulation. Our study represents one of the early instances of applying WGS to complex disease with a large environmental component and demonstrates how WGS can identify risk variants, including CNVs and low-frequency variants, largely untested in GWAS.</p></div

    Identification of an intronic deletion in <i>NEDD4L</i> associated with asthma.

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    <p>(<b>A</b>) A representation of the location of the 6 kbp deletion. This deletion occurs in an intron shared by all reported transcripts of this gene (blue). The deletion was identified from paired-end sequence reads and validated by array CGH as shown for one of the sequenced trios. The log<sub>2</sub> ratios of the probes in this region are shown as vertical bars with a log<sub>2</sub> ratio of zero represented by the horizontal line. The red vertical bars in the child and mother indicate negative log<sub>2</sub> ratios and confirm the deletion. (<b>B</b>) The frequency of this deletion in multiple populations is shown in the bar graph with the deletion allele frequency on the y-axis. The error bars represent the standard error on the allele frequency based on the binomial distribution. The Hutterite case (black) and control (gray) frequencies were determined by array CGH; the frequencies for the other populations are as reported by the 1000 Genomes Project.</p
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