| Literature DB >> 31829207 |
Aditya Ekawade1, Matt Velinder2, Alistair Ward1, Tonya DiSera1, Chase Miller1, Yi Qiao1, Gabor Marth1.
Abstract
When ordering genetic testing or triaging candidate variants in exome and genome sequencing studies, it is critical to generate and test a comprehensive list of candidate genes that succinctly describe the complete and objective phenotypic features of disease. Significant efforts have been made to curate gene:disease associations both in academic research and commercial genetic testing laboratory settings. However, many of these valuable resources exist as islands and must be used independently, generating static, single-resource gene:disease association lists. Here we describe genepanel.iobio (https://genepanel.iobio.io) an easy to use, free and open-source web tool for generating disease- and phenotype-associated gene lists from multiple gene:disease association resources, including the NCBI Genetic Testing Registry (GTR), Phenolyzer, and the Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO). We demonstrate the utility of genepanel.iobio by applying it to complex, rare and undiagnosed disease cases that had reached a diagnostic conclusion. We find that genepanel.iobio is able to correctly prioritize the gene containing the diagnostic variant in roughly half of these challenging cases. Importantly, each component resource contributed diagnostic value, showing the benefits of this aggregate approach. We expect genepanel.iobio will improve the ease and diagnostic value of generating gene:disease association lists for genetic test ordering and whole genome or exome sequencing variant prioritization.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31829207 PMCID: PMC6907284 DOI: 10.1186/s12920-019-0641-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genomics ISSN: 1755-8794 Impact factor: 3.063
Fig. 1An overview of genepanel.iobio applied to clinical genetics cases a a diagrammatic view of the resources genepanel.iobio utilizes and how genepanel.iobio presents a prioritized and unioned set of candidate genes b a screenshot view of the summary page of a genepanel.iobio analysis, showing the ability to modify and customize the final gene list and export the results c two independent analysts correctly prioritize the diagnostic gene using genepanel.iobio in 7 of the 16 clinical cases (44%) tested and where the diagnostic gene was ranked in the final gene list by each analyst d radar-plot summary of which resources correctly prioritized the diagnostic gene, allowing for multiple resources to identify the same gene