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1.
Nature ; 548(7665): 87-91, 2017 08 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28746312

RESUMO

Hundreds of thousands of human genomes are now being sequenced to characterize genetic variation and use this information to augment association mapping studies of complex disorders and other phenotypic traits. Genetic variation is identified mainly by mapping short reads to the reference genome or by performing local assembly. However, these approaches are biased against discovery of structural variants and variation in the more complex parts of the genome. Hence, large-scale de novo assembly is needed. Here we show that it is possible to construct excellent de novo assemblies from high-coverage sequencing with mate-pair libraries extending up to 20 kilobases. We report de novo assemblies of 150 individuals (50 trios) from the GenomeDenmark project. The quality of these assemblies is similar to those obtained using the more expensive long-read technology. We use the assemblies to identify a rich set of structural variants including many novel insertions and demonstrate how this variant catalogue enables further deciphering of known association mapping signals. We leverage the assemblies to provide 100 completely resolved major histocompatibility complex haplotypes and to resolve major parts of the Y chromosome. Our study provides a regional reference genome that we expect will improve the power of future association mapping studies and hence pave the way for precision medicine initiatives, which now are being launched in many countries including Denmark.


Assuntos
Variação Genética/genética , Genética Populacional/normas , Genoma Humano/genética , Genômica/normas , Análise de Sequência de DNA/normas , Adulto , Alelos , Criança , Cromossomos Humanos Y/genética , Dinamarca , Feminino , Haplótipos/genética , Humanos , Complexo Principal de Histocompatibilidade/genética , Masculino , Idade Materna , Taxa de Mutação , Idade Paterna , Mutação Puntual/genética , Padrões de Referência
2.
Eur Heart J ; 39(25): 2390-2397, 2018 07 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29750272

RESUMO

Aims: The gut microbiome influences metabolic syndrome (MetS) and inflammation and is therapeutically modifiable. Arterial stiffness is poorly correlated with most traditional risk factors. Our aim was to examine whether gut microbial composition is associated with arterial stiffness. Methods and results: We assessed the correlation between carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (PWV), a measure of arterial stiffness, and gut microbiome composition in 617 middle-aged women from the TwinsUK cohort with concurrent serum metabolomics data. Pulse wave velocity was negatively correlated with gut microbiome alpha diversity (Shannon index, Beta(SE)= -0.25(0.07), P = 1 × 10-4) after adjustment for covariates. We identified seven operational taxonomic units associated with PWV after adjusting for covariates and multiple testing-two belonging to the Ruminococcaceae family. Associations between microbe abundances, microbe diversity, and PWV remained significant after adjustment for levels of gut-derived metabolites (indolepropionate, trimethylamine oxide, and phenylacetylglutamine). We linearly combined the PWV-associated gut microbiome-derived variables and found that microbiome factors explained 8.3% (95% confidence interval 4.3-12.4%) of the variance in PWV. A formal mediation analysis revealed that only a small proportion (5.51%) of the total effect of the gut microbiome on PWV was mediated by insulin resistance and visceral fat, c-reactive protein, and cardiovascular risk factors after adjusting for age, body mass index, and mean arterial pressure. Conclusions: Gut microbiome diversity is inversely associated with arterial stiffness in women. The effect of gut microbiome composition on PWV is only minimally mediated by MetS. This first human observation linking the gut microbiome to arterial stiffness suggests that targeting the microbiome may be a way to treat arterial ageing.


Assuntos
Microbioma Gastrointestinal , Rigidez Vascular/fisiologia , Correlação de Dados , Estudos Transversais , Feminino , Humanos , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Análise de Onda de Pulso
3.
BMC Bioinformatics ; 19(1): 239, 2018 06 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29940840

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The adaptive immune response intrinsically depends on hypervariable human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genes. Concomitantly, correct HLA phenotyping is crucial for successful donor-patient matching in organ transplantation. The cost and technical limitations of current laboratory techniques, together with advances in next-generation sequencing (NGS) methodologies, have increased the need for precise computational typing methods. RESULTS: We tested two widespread HLA typing methods using high quality full genome sequencing data from 150 individuals in 50 family trios from the Genome Denmark project. First, we computed descendant accuracies assessing the agreement in the inheritance of alleles from parents to offspring. Second, we compared the locus-specific homozygosity rates as well as the allele frequencies; and we compared those to the observed values in related populations. We provide guidelines for testing the accuracy of HLA typing methods by comparing family information, which is independent of the availability of curated alleles. CONCLUSIONS: Although current computational methods for HLA typing generally provide satisfactory results, our benchmark - using data with ultra-high sequencing depth - demonstrates the incompleteness of current reference databases, and highlights the importance of providing genomic databases addressing current sequencing standards, a problem yet to be resolved before benefiting fully from personalised medicine approaches HLA phenotyping is essential.


Assuntos
Benchmarking/métodos , Genômica/métodos , Técnicas de Genotipagem/métodos , Antígenos HLA/genética , Família , Teste de Histocompatibilidade , Humanos , Pais , Suécia
4.
Physiol Genomics ; 50(2): 117-126, 2018 02 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29341867

RESUMO

Disruption in the metabolism of lipids is broadly classified under dyslipidemia and relates to the concentration of lipids in the blood. Dyslipidemia is a predictor of cardio-metabolic disease including obesity. Traditionally, the large interindividual variation has been related to genetic factors and diet. Genome-wide association studies have identified over 150 loci related to abnormal lipid levels, explaining ~40% of the total variation. Part of the unexplained variance has been attributed to environmental factors including diet, but the extent of the dietary contribution remains unquantified. Furthermore, other factors are likely to influence lipid metabolism including the gut microbiome, which plays an important role in the digestion of different dietary components including fats and polysaccharides. Here we describe the contributing role of host genetics and the gut microbiome to dyslipidemia and discuss the potential therapeutic implications of advances in understanding the gut microbiome to the treatment of dyslipidemia.


Assuntos
Dislipidemias/genética , Dislipidemias/microbiologia , Microbioma Gastrointestinal/fisiologia , Metabolismo dos Lipídeos/fisiologia , Animais , Microbioma Gastrointestinal/genética , Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla , Humanos , Metabolismo dos Lipídeos/genética , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único/genética
5.
BMC Genomics ; 17 Suppl 2: 396, 2016 06 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27357839

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The association between aberrant signal processing by protein kinases and human diseases such as cancer was established long time ago. However, understanding the link between sequence variants in the protein kinase superfamily and the mechanistic complex traits at the molecular level remains challenging: cells tolerate most genomic alterations and only a minor fraction disrupt molecular function sufficiently and drive disease. RESULTS: KinMutRF is a novel random-forest method to automatically identify pathogenic variants in human kinases. Twenty six decision trees implemented as a random forest ponder a battery of features that characterize the variants: a) at the gene level, including membership to a Kinbase group and Gene Ontology terms; b) at the PFAM domain level; and c) at the residue level, the types of amino acids involved, changes in biochemical properties, functional annotations from UniProt, Phospho.ELM and FireDB. KinMutRF identifies disease-associated variants satisfactorily (Acc: 0.88, Prec:0.82, Rec:0.75, F-score:0.78, MCC:0.68) when trained and cross-validated with the 3689 human kinase variants from UniProt that have been annotated as neutral or pathogenic. All unclassified variants were excluded from the training set. Furthermore, KinMutRF is discussed with respect to two independent kinase-specific sets of mutations no included in the training and testing, Kin-Driver (643 variants) and Pon-BTK (1495 variants). Moreover, we provide predictions for the 848 protein kinase variants in UniProt that remained unclassified. A public implementation of KinMutRF, including documentation and examples, is available online ( http://kinmut2.bioinfo.cnio.es ). The source code for local installation is released under a GPL version 3 license, and can be downloaded from https://github.com/Rbbt-Workflows/KinMut2 . CONCLUSIONS: KinMutRF is capable of classifying kinase variation with good performance. Predictions by KinMutRF compare favorably in a benchmark with other state-of-the-art methods (i.e. SIFT, Polyphen-2, MutationAssesor, MutationTaster, LRT, CADD, FATHMM, and VEST). Kinase-specific features rank as the most elucidatory in terms of information gain and are likely the improvement in prediction performance. This advocates for the development of family-specific classifiers able to exploit the discriminatory power of features unique to individual protein families.


Assuntos
Biologia Computacional/métodos , Mutação , Proteínas Quinases/genética , Bases de Dados de Proteínas , Árvores de Decisões , Variação Genética , Humanos , Software
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