| Literature DB >> 24092746 |
Ekta Khurana1,2, Yao Fu1, Vincenza Colonna3,4, Xinmeng Jasmine Mu1, Hyun Min Kang5, Tuuli Lappalainen6,7,8, Andrea Sboner9,10, Lucas Lochovsky1, Jieming Chen1,11, Arif Harmanci1,2, Jishnu Das12,13, Alexej Abyzov1,2, Suganthi Balasubramanian1,2, Kathryn Beal14, Dimple Chakravarty9, Daniel Challis15, Yuan Chen3, Declan Clarke16, Laura Clarke14, Fiona Cunningham14, Uday S Evani15, Paul Flicek14, Robert Fragoza13,17, Erik Garrison18, Richard Gibbs15, Zeynep H Gümüş10,19, Javier Herrero14, Naoki Kitabayashi9, Yong Kong2,20, Kasper Lage21,22,23,24,25, Vaja Liluashvili10,19, Steven M Lipkin26, Daniel G MacArthur22,27, Gabor Marth18, Donna Muzny15, Tune H Pers24,28,29, Graham R S Ritchie14, Jeffrey A Rosenfeld30,31,32, Cristina Sisu1,2, Xiaomu Wei13,26, Michael Wilson1,33, Yali Xue3, Fuli Yu15, Emmanouil T Dermitzakis6,7,8, Haiyuan Yu12,13, Mark A Rubin9, Chris Tyler-Smith3, Mark Gerstein1,2,34.
Abstract
Interpreting variants, especially noncoding ones, in the increasing number of personal genomes is challenging. We used patterns of polymorphisms in functionally annotated regions in 1092 humans to identify deleterious variants; then we experimentally validated candidates. We analyzed both coding and noncoding regions, with the former corroborating the latter. We found regions particularly sensitive to mutations ("ultrasensitive") and variants that are disruptive because of mechanistic effects on transcription-factor binding (that is, "motif-breakers"). We also found variants in regions with higher network centrality tend to be deleterious. Insertions and deletions followed a similar pattern to single-nucleotide variants, with some notable exceptions (e.g., certain deletions and enhancers). On the basis of these patterns, we developed a computational tool (FunSeq), whose application to ~90 cancer genomes reveals nearly a hundred candidate noncoding drivers.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24092746 PMCID: PMC3947637 DOI: 10.1126/science.1235587
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728