scholarly journals From Single Variants to Protein Cascades

2015 ◽  
Vol 291 (4) ◽  
pp. 1582-1590
Author(s):  
Sabine C. Mueller ◽  
Björn Sommer ◽  
Christina Backes ◽  
Jan Haas ◽  
Benjamin Meder ◽  
...  

Understanding the role of genetics in disease has become a central part of medical research. Non-synonymous single nucleotide variants (nsSNVs) in coding regions of human genes frequently lead to pathological phenotypes. Beyond single variations, the individual combination of nsSNVs may add to pathogenic processes. We developed a multiscale pipeline to systematically analyze the existence of quantitative effects of multiple nsSNVs and gene combinations in single individuals on pathogenicity. Based on this pipeline, we detected in a data set of 842 nsSNVs discovered in 76 genes related to cardiomyopathies, associated nsSNV combinations in seven genes present in at least 70% of all 639 patient samples, but not in a control cohort of healthy humans. Structural analyses of these revealed primarily an influence on the protein stability. For amino acid substitutions located at the protein surface, we generally observed a proximity to putative binding pockets. To computationally analyze cumulative effects and their impact, pathogenicity methods are currently being developed. Our approach supports this process, as shown on the example of a cardiac phenotype but can be likewise applied to other diseases such as cancer.

2012 ◽  
Vol 93 (3) ◽  
pp. 513-516
Author(s):  
M N Katina ◽  
R F Gayfullina ◽  
V V Valiullin ◽  
A A Rizvanov ◽  
R F Khamitov ◽  
...  

Personalized medicine involves the use of methods of genomics and proteomics by physicians for early diagnosis, prediction of the nature of the disease course and the choice of medicines and their doses based on personalized characteristics of the individual patient. Advances in the study of the human genome make it possible to reveal the interrelation between the individual mutations in the human genes (polymorphisms) and predisposition to certain diseases. Currently there are more than 10 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms in the human genome, however their biological role remains poorly understood. On the basis of a literature search of electronic full-text and abstract-only versions of articles, which was conducted in the PUBMED, OMIM and GENE databases, collected was the information on genetic predisposition to systemic atherosclerosis. The review is dedicated to polymorphisms of the major genes that play a role in the pathophysiology of atherosclerosis of the lower extremities.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Takashi Higuchi ◽  
Shomi Oka ◽  
Hiroshi Furukawa ◽  
Minoru Nakamura ◽  
Atsumasa Komori ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ianthe A. E. M. van Belzen ◽  
Alexander Schönhuth ◽  
Patrick Kemmeren ◽  
Jayne Y. Hehir-Kwa

AbstractCancer is generally characterized by acquired genomic aberrations in a broad spectrum of types and sizes, ranging from single nucleotide variants to structural variants (SVs). At least 30% of cancers have a known pathogenic SV used in diagnosis or treatment stratification. However, research into the role of SVs in cancer has been limited due to difficulties in detection. Biological and computational challenges confound SV detection in cancer samples, including intratumor heterogeneity, polyploidy, and distinguishing tumor-specific SVs from germline and somatic variants present in healthy cells. Classification of tumor-specific SVs is challenging due to inconsistencies in detected breakpoints, derived variant types and biological complexity of some rearrangements. Full-spectrum SV detection with high recall and precision requires integration of multiple algorithms and sequencing technologies to rescue variants that are difficult to resolve through individual methods. Here, we explore current strategies for integrating SV callsets and to enable the use of tumor-specific SVs in precision oncology.


Author(s):  
Alexander Charney ◽  
Pamela Sklar

Schizophrenia and bipolar disorder are the classic psychotic disorders. Both diseases are strongly familial, but have proven recalcitrant to genetic methodologies for identifying the etiology until recently. There is now convincing genetic evidence that indicates a contribution of many DNA changes to the risk of becoming ill. For schizophrenia, there are large contributions of rare copy number variants and common single nucleotide variants, with an overall highly polygenic genetic architecture. For bipolar disorder, the role of copy number variation appears to be much less pronounced. Specific common single nucleotide polymorphisms are associated, and there is evidence for polygenicity. Several surprises have emerged from the genetic data that indicate there is significantly more molecular overlap in copy number variants between autism and schizophrenia, and in common variants between schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.


2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (W1) ◽  
pp. W136-W141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emidio Capriotti ◽  
Ludovica Montanucci ◽  
Giuseppe Profiti ◽  
Ivan Rossi ◽  
Diana Giannuzzi ◽  
...  

Abstract As the amount of genomic variation data increases, tools that are able to score the functional impact of single nucleotide variants become more and more necessary. While there are several prediction servers available for interpreting the effects of variants in the human genome, only few have been developed for other species, and none were specifically designed for species of veterinary interest such as the dog. Here, we present Fido-SNP the first predictor able to discriminate between Pathogenic and Benign single-nucleotide variants in the dog genome. Fido-SNP is a binary classifier based on the Gradient Boosting algorithm. It is able to classify and score the impact of variants in both coding and non-coding regions based on sequence features within seconds. When validated on a previously unseen set of annotated variants from the OMIA database, Fido-SNP reaches 88% overall accuracy, 0.77 Matthews correlation coefficient and 0.91 Area Under the ROC Curve.


2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. S854-S854
Author(s):  
Becky A Smith ◽  
Amy Mathers ◽  
Shireen Kotay ◽  
Hardik Parikh ◽  
Katie E Barry ◽  
...  

Abstract Background We evaluated the role of an in-room sink in NDM-1 K. pneumoniae (NDMKP) transmission. Methods In October 2017, Infection Prevention (IP) initiated weekly point prevalence rectal screening cultures in 4 ICUs. In 3/2018, IP launched an epidemiologic and environmental investigation following identification of a patient with NDMKP rectal colonization. Environmental samples including swabs of biofilm from drains and water from p-traps were obtained from the in-room sink. Illumina whole-genome sequencing (WGS) was performed on all NDMKP patient and environmental isolates. Single nucleotide variants (SNVs) were identified against the reference Klebsiella pneumoniae strain MLST15 (NZ_CP022127), and isolates within 150 SNVs of each other were considered to be genomically related. Results Two patients were identified with NDMKP infection or colonization between July 2017 and March 2018. The index patient had prolonged hospitalization and developed NDMKP bacteremia on hospital day (HD) 30. Approximately 9 months later, the second patient was admitted to the same ICU room that had been occupied by the index patient for 13 days and was identified to have NDMKP rectal colonization on HD 5. Environmental samples from the in-room sink of the ICU room grew NDMKP. WGS demonstrated relatedness between NDMKP isolates from the 2 patients (112 SNV), the index patient and the sink (52 SNV), and the second patient and the sink (80 SNV). The in-room sink was replaced in 4/18 and no further cases of NDMKP infection or colonization have been identified at DUH in over 12 months. Conclusion We report an NDM-1 K. pneumoniae transmission event possibly related to a contaminated in-room sink drain. Remarkably, 9 months elapsed between the index case and the second case, with no additional interim cases detected on weekly point-prevalence screening or clinical cultures. The long duration of time between and the index patient, secondary case, and sink culture may explain why WGS showed relatedness but not identical clones. Education around sink use, design, and more effective cleaning strategies are needed to mitigate environment-to-patient transmission of CRO. Disclosures All authors: No reported disclosures.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexia L. Weeks ◽  
Richard W. Francis ◽  
Joao I. C. F. Neri ◽  
Nathaly M. C. Costa ◽  
Nivea M. R. Arrais ◽  
...  

Abstract Exome sequencing is widely used in the diagnosis of rare genetic diseases and provides useful variant data for analysis of complex diseases. There is not always adequate population-specific reference data to assist in assigning a diagnostic variant to a specific clinical condition. Here we provide a catalogue of variants called after sequencing the exomes of 45 babies from Rio Grande do Nord in Brazil. Sequence data were processed using an ‘intersect-then-combine’ (ITC) approach, using GATK and SAMtools to call variants. A total of 612,761 variants were identified in at least one individual in this Brazilian Cohort, including 559,448 single nucleotide variants (SNVs) and 53,313 insertion/deletions. Of these, 58,111 overlapped with nonsynonymous (nsSNVs) or splice site (ssSNVs) SNVs in dbNSFP. As an aid to clinical diagnosis of rare diseases, we used the American College of Medicine Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) guidelines to assign pathogenic/likely pathogenic status to 185 (0.32%) of the 58,111 nsSNVs and ssSNVs. Our data set provides a useful reference point for diagnosis of rare diseases in Brazil. (169 words).


2016 ◽  
Vol 91 (6) ◽  
pp. 301-309 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diego Albani ◽  
Elisabetta Pupillo ◽  
Elisa Bianchi ◽  
Armando Chierchia ◽  
Rosalba Martines ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 4207-4207
Author(s):  
Brian S White ◽  
Irena Lanc ◽  
Daniel Auclair ◽  
Robert Fulton ◽  
Mark A Fiala ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Multiple myeloma (MM) is a hematologic cancer characterized by a diversity of genetic lesions-translocations, copy number alterations (CNAs), and single nucleotide variants (SNVs). The prognostic value of translocations and of CNAs has been well established. Determining the clinical significance of SNVs, which are recurrently mutated at much lower frequencies, and how this significance is impacted by translocations and CNAs requires additional, large-scale correlative studies. Such studies can be facilitated by cost-effective targeted sequencing approaches. Hence, we designed a single-platform targeted sequencing approach capable of detecting all three variant types. Methods: We designed oligonucleotide probes complementary to the coding regions of 467 genes and to the IgH and MYC loci, allowing a probe to closely match at most 5 regions within the genome. Genes were selected if they were expressed in an independent RNA-seq MM data set and harbored germline SNP-filtered variants that: (1) occurred with frequency >3%, (2) were clustered in hotspots, (3) occurred in recurrently mutated "cancer genes" (as annotated in COSMIC or MutSig), or (4) occurred in genes involved in DNA repair and/or B-cell biology. IgH and MYC tiling was unbiased (with respect to annotated features within the loci) and spanned from 50 kilobasepairs (kbps) upstream of both regions to 50 kbps downstream of IgH and 100 kbps downstream of MYC. Results: We performed targeted sequencing of 96 CD138-enriched samples derived from MM patients, as well as matched peripheral blood leukocyte normal controls. Sequencing depth (mean 107X) was commensurate with that of available exome sequencing data from these samples (mean 71X). Samples harbored a mean of 25 non-silent variants, including those in known MM-associated genes: NRAS (24%), KRAS (22%), FAM46C (17%), TP53 (10%), DIS3 (8%), and BRAF (3%). Variants detected by both platforms showed a strong correlation (r^2 = 0.8). The capture array detected activating, oncogenic variants in NRAS Q61K (n=3 patients) and KRAS G12C/D/R/V (n=5) that were not detected in exome data. Additionally, we found non-silent, capture-specific variants in MTOR (3%) and in two transcription-related genes that have been previously implicated in cancer: ZFHX4 (5%) and CHD3 (5%). To assess the potential role of deep subclonal variants and our ability to detect them, we performed additional sequencing (mean 565X) on six of the tumor/normal pairs. This revealed 14 manually-reviewed, non-silent variants that were not detected by the initial targeted sequencing. These had a mean variant allele frequency of 2.8% and included mutations in DNMT3A and FAM46C. At least one of these 14 variants occurred in five of the six re-sequenced samples. This highlights the importance of this additional depth, which will be used in future studies. Our approach successfully detected CNAs near expected frequencies, including hyperdiploidy (52%), del(13) (43%), and gain of 1q (35%). Similarly, it inferred IgH translocations at expected frequencies: t(4;14) (14%), t(6;14) (3%), t(11;14) (15%), and t(14;20) (1%). As expected, translocations occur predominantly within the IgH constant region, but also frequently 5' (i.e., telomeric) of the IGHM switch region, and occasionally within the V and D regions. We detected MYC -associated translocations, whose frequencies have been the subject of debate, at 10% (n=9 patients), with five involving IgH, three having both partners in or near MYC, and one having both types. Finally, our platform detected novel IgH translocations with partners near DERL3 (n=2), MYCN (n=1), and FLT3 (n=1). Additional evidence suggests that DERL3 and MYCN may be targets of IgH-induced overexpression: of 84 RNA-seq patient samples, six exhibited outlying expression of DERL3, including one sample in which we detected the translocation in corresponding DNA, and one exhibited outlying expression of MYCN. Conclusion: Our MM-specific targeted sequencing strategy is capable of detecting deeply subclonal SNVs, in addition to CNAs and IgH and MYC translocations. Though additional validation is required, particularly with respect to translocation detection, we anticipate that such technology will soon enable clinical testing on a single sequencing platform. Disclosures Vij: Celgene, Onyx, Takeda, Novartis, BMS, Sanofi, Janssen, Merck: Consultancy; Takeda, Onyx: Research Funding.


10.1038/10290 ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 231-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michele Cargill ◽  
David Altshuler ◽  
James Ireland ◽  
Pamela Sklar ◽  
Kristin Ardlie ◽  
...  

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