| Literature DB >> 29861106 |
Andrea Ganna1, F Kyle Satterstrom2, Seyedeh M Zekavat3, Indraniel Das4, Mitja I Kurki5, Claire Churchhouse2, Jessica Alfoldi6, Alicia R Martin2, Aki S Havulinna7, Andrea Byrnes2, Wesley K Thompson8, Philip R Nielsen9, Konrad J Karczewski6, Elmo Saarentaus10, Manuel A Rivas11, Namrata Gupta12, Olli Pietiläinen13, Connor A Emdin12, Francesco Lescai14, Jonas Bybjerg-Grauholm15, Jason Flannick3, Josep M Mercader16, Miriam Udler16, Markku Laakso17, Veikko Salomaa18, Christina Hultman19, Samuli Ripatti20, Eija Hämäläinen10, Jukka S Moilanen21, Jarmo Körkkö21, Outi Kuismin21, Merete Nordentoft22, David M Hougaard15, Ole Mors23, Thomas Werge24, Preben Bo Mortensen25, Daniel MacArthur6, Mark J Daly2, Patrick F Sullivan26, Adam E Locke4, Aarno Palotie27, Anders D Børglum14, Sekar Kathiresan3, Benjamin M Neale28.
Abstract
There is a limited understanding about the impact of rare protein-truncating variants across multiple phenotypes. We explore the impact of this class of variants on 13 quantitative traits and 10 diseases using whole-exome sequencing data from 100,296 individuals. Protein-truncating variants in genes intolerant to this class of mutations increased risk of autism, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, intellectual disability, and ADHD. In individuals without these disorders, there was an association with shorter height, lower education, increased hospitalization, and reduced age at enrollment. Gene sets implicated from GWASs did not show a significant protein-truncating variants burden beyond what was captured by established Mendelian genes. In conclusion, we provide a thorough investigation of the impact of rare deleterious coding variants on complex traits, suggesting widespread pleiotropic risk.Entities:
Keywords: burden analysis; constraint genes; exome sequencing; phewas; rare variants; selection; ultra-rare variants
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29861106 PMCID: PMC5992130 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2018.05.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025