| Literature DB >> 29754769 |
Yuwen Liu1, Yanyu Liang2, A Ercument Cicek3, Zhongshan Li4, Jinchen Li5, Rebecca A Muhle6, Martina Krenzer7, Yue Mei8, Yan Wang8, Nicholas Knoblauch9, Jean Morrison1, Siming Zhao1, Yi Jiang10, Evan Geller11, Iuliana Ionita-Laza12, Jinyu Wu13, Kun Xia14, James P Noonan11, Zhong Sheng Sun15, Xin He16.
Abstract
Analysis of de novo mutations (DNMs) from sequencing data of nuclear families has identified risk genes for many complex diseases, including multiple neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disorders. Most of these efforts have focused on mutations in protein-coding sequences. Evidence from genome-wide association studies (GWASs) strongly suggests that variants important to human diseases often lie in non-coding regions. Extending DNM-based approaches to non-coding sequences is challenging, however, because the functional significance of non-coding mutations is difficult to predict. We propose a statistical framework for analyzing DNMs from whole-genome sequencing (WGS) data. This method, TADA-Annotations (TADA-A), is a major advance of the TADA method we developed earlier for DNM analysis in coding regions. TADA-A is able to incorporate many functional annotations such as conservation and enhancer marks, to learn from data which annotations are informative of pathogenic mutations, and to combine both coding and non-coding mutations at the gene level to detect risk genes. It also supports meta-analysis of multiple DNM studies, while adjusting for study-specific technical effects. We applied TADA-A to WGS data of ∼300 autism-affected family trios across five studies and discovered several autism risk genes. The software is freely available for all research uses.Entities:
Keywords: autism; de novo mutations; epigenomics; noncoding sequences; psychiatric disorders; statistical model
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29754769 PMCID: PMC5992125 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2018.03.023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025