| Literature DB >> 29149916 |
Jacob Gratten1,2, Qiongyi Zhao1, Beben Benyamin1,2, Fleur Garton1,2, Ji He3, Paul J Leo4,5, Marie Mangelsdorf1, Lisa Anderson4,5, Zong-Hong Zhang1, Lu Chen3, Xiang-Ding Chen6, Katie Cremin4,5, Hong-Weng Deng7, Janette Edson1, Ying-Ying Han8, Jessica Harris4,5, Anjali K Henders1,2, Zi-Bing Jin9, Zhongshan Li10, Yong Lin8, Xiaolu Liu3, Mhairi Marshall4,5, Bryan J Mowry1,11, Shu Ran8, David C Reutens12, Sharon Song4,5, Li-Jun Tan6, Lu Tang3, Robyn H Wallace1, Lawrie Wheeler4,5, Jinyu Wu10, Jian Yang1,2, Huji Xu13, Peter M Visscher1,2, Perry F Bartlett1, Matthew A Brown4,5, Naomi R Wray14,15, Dongsheng Fan3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive neurological disease characterised by the degeneration of motor neurons, which are responsible for voluntary movement. There remains limited understanding of disease aetiology, with median survival of ALS of three years and no effective treatment. Identifying genes that contribute to ALS susceptibility is an important step towards understanding aetiology. The vast majority of published human genetic studies, including for ALS, have used samples of European ancestry. The importance of trans-ethnic studies in human genetic studies is widely recognised, yet a dearth of studies of non-European ancestries remains. Here, we report analyses of novel whole-exome sequencing (WES) data from Chinese ALS and control individuals.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29149916 PMCID: PMC5693798 DOI: 10.1186/s13073-017-0487-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Med ISSN: 1756-994X Impact factor: 11.117
Genes identified from analysis of rare variant counts in combined Chinese and European ancestry data
| Gene | Model | European | Chinese | Combined | Combined OR (low/high) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Dom coding | 4.7 × 10–6 | 6.7 × 10–3 (11/2) | 6.6 × 10–7 | 2.3 (1.6/3.2) |
| Dom not benign | 2.2 × 10–6 | 5.0 × 10–2 (7/0) | 3.1 × 10–7 | 2.9 (1.9/4.4) | |
| Dom LoF | 3.2 × 10–9 | 3.8 × 10–1 (2/0) | 1.1 × 10–9 | 8.2 (3.7/20.7) | |
|
| Dom coding | 7.1 × 10–8 | 3.7 × 10–2 (9/1) | 8.9 × 10–9 | 9.5 (3.8/28.4) |
| Dom not benign | 3.9 × 10–7 | 5.3 × 10–2 (8/1) | 6.9 × 10–8 | 11.7 (3.9/47.5) | |
| Dom LoF | NA | NA | NA | NA | |
|
| Dom coding | 1.3 × 10–9 | 1.4 × 10–1 (7/1) | 2.3 × 10–10 | 3.8 (2.4/5.9) |
| Dom not benign | 3.6 × 10–11 | 1.9 × 10–1 (6/1) | 8.3 × 10–12 | 5.9 (3.3/10.8) | |
| Dom LoF | 1.6 × 10–6 | 2.5 × 10–1 (1/0) | 9.6 × 10–7 | 13.1 (3.7/70.9) |
aCochran–Mantel–Haenszel test (Cirulli et al., 2015) [9]
bSKAT-O test [29]
cNumber of Chinese case carriers and control carriers out of 610 cases and 460 controls
dCochran–Mantel–Haenszel test
Fig. 1Quantile–quantile plots of the analysis of rare variant counts in combined Chinese and European data (up to 4797 cases and 9236 controls). The Cochran–Mantel–Haenszel test was applied to qualifying variants under three models: (L) dominant coding; (R) dominant not benign; and dominant LOF (Additional file 2: Figure S1). Test statistics are provided for the genes with the top ten associations (blue = increased risk, grey = reduced risk; *no qualifying variants were observed in controls for gene S100A2, so the OR was estimated by adding 0.5 to each cell of the largest cohort). The Bonferroni-corrected significance threshold was p ≤ 1.9 × 10–6, based on 26,214 tests across 18,117 genes. The genomic inflation factor, lambda (λ), was 1.069 for the dominant coding analysis and 1.067 for the dominant not benign analysisrecognised in our Chinese sample
Fig. 2Summary of rare variants in Chinese WES sample comprising 597 sporadic (sALS) and 13 familial (fALS) cases. The screening of WES data of Chinese ALS cases identified ~ 5% with previously reported likely causal variants. Variants previously reported for ALS but now found to have population frequency (0.00005 ≤ freq < 0.01) are classified as ‘unlikely causal’. For variants identified in cases only, a number of putatively damaging, rare (MAF < 0.00005 dominant or < 0.01 recessive) variants in a predefined set of known ALS-priority genes (n = 32 cases) and ALS-relevant genes (n = 89 cases) were identified, but these have uncertain significance. Considering only fALS probands (n = 13), WES identified previously reported likely causal variants in five cases (1 DCTN1, 2 FUS, 1 SOD1, 1 TARDBP) with uncertain significance variants (damaging rare in ALS-relevant genes) in four others. Four percent of cases (24/610) and 3% of controls (13/460) were identified to be carrying one or more rare variants in ALS genes (from any category; causal, risk, candidate) and/or similar disease genes (Additional file 1: Table S10), but no individual harboured more than one likely causal variant. The number of cases are defined in the legend and expressed a percentage of total ALS case exomes screened (n = 610)