| Literature DB >> 29044887 |
Huiying Zhao1,2, Yuedong Yang3, Yutong Lu3, Matthew Mort4, David N Cooper4, Zhiyi Zuo1,5, Yaoqi Zhou6.
Abstract
Many genetic diseases exhibit considerable epidemiological comorbidity and common symptoms, which provokes debate about the extent of their etiological overlap. The rapid growth in the number of known disease-causing mutations in the Human Gene Mutation Database (HGMD) has allowed us to characterize genetic similarities between diseases by ascertaining the extent to which identical genetic mutations are shared between diseases. Using this approach, we show that 41.6% of disease pairs in all possible pairs (42, 083) exhibit a significant sharing of mutations (P value < 0.05). These mutation-related disease pairs are in agreement with heritability-based disease-disease relations in 48 neurological and psychiatric disease pairs (Spearman's correlation coefficient = 0.50; P value = 3.4 × 10-5 ), and share over-expressed genes significantly more often than unrelated disease pairs (1.5-1.8-fold higher; P value ≤ 1.6 × 10-4 ). The usefulness of mutation-related disease pairs was further demonstrated for predicting novel mutations and identifying individuals susceptible to Crohn disease. Moreover, the mutation-based disease network concurs closely with that based on phenotypes.Entities:
Keywords: candidate gene; disease similarity; disease-causing mutations; disease-susceptible individuals
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29044887 DOI: 10.1002/humu.23358
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.878