scholarly journals Burden of Rare Variants in Synaptic Genes in Patients with Severe Tinnitus: An Exome Based Extreme Phenotype Study

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sana Amanat ◽  
Alvaro Gallego-Martinez ◽  
Joseph Sollini ◽  
Patricia Perez-Carpena ◽  
Juan Manuel Espinosa-Sanchez ◽  
...  
EBioMedicine ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 66 ◽  
pp. 103309 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sana Amanat ◽  
Alvaro Gallego-Martinez ◽  
Joseph Sollini ◽  
Patricia Perez-Carpena ◽  
Juan M. Espinosa-Sanchez ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Sana Amanat ◽  
Teresa Requena ◽  
Jose Antonio Lopez-Escamez

Exome sequencing has been commonly used in rare diseases by selecting multiplex families or singletons with an extreme phenotype (EP) to search for rare variants in coding regions. The EP strategy covers both extreme ends of a disease spectrum and it has been also used to investigate the contribution of rare variants to heritability in complex clinical traits. We have conducted a systematic review to find evidence supporting the use of EP strategies to search for rare variants in genetic studies of complex diseases, to highlight the contribution of rare variation to the genetic structure of multiallelic conditions. After performing the quality assessment of the retrieved records, we selected 19 genetic studies considering EP to demonstrate genetic association. All the studies successfully identified several rare variants, de novo mutations and many novel candidate genes were also identified by selecting an EP. There is enough evidence to support that the EP approach in patients with an early onset of the disease can contribute to the identification of rare variants in candidate genes or pathways involved in complex diseases. EP patients may contribute to a better understanding of the underlying genetic architecture of common heterogeneous disorders such as tinnitus or age-related hearing loss.


Genes ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 987
Author(s):  
Sana Amanat ◽  
Teresa Requena ◽  
Jose Antonio Lopez-Escamez

Exome sequencing has been commonly used to characterize rare diseases by selecting multiplex families or singletons with an extreme phenotype (EP) and searching for rare variants in coding regions. The EP strategy covers both extreme ends of a disease spectrum and it has been also used to investigate the contribution of rare variants to the heritability of complex clinical traits. We conducted a systematic review to find evidence supporting the use of EP strategies in the search for rare variants in genetic studies of complex diseases and highlight the contribution of rare variations to the genetic structure of polygenic conditions. After assessing the quality of the retrieved records, we selected 19 genetic studies considering EPs to demonstrate genetic association. All studies successfully identified several rare or de novo variants, and many novel candidate genes were also identified by selecting an EP. There is enough evidence to support that the EP approach for patients with an early onset of a disease can contribute to the identification of rare variants in candidate genes or pathways involved in complex diseases. EP patients may contribute to a better understanding of the underlying genetic architecture of common heterogeneous disorders such as tinnitus or age-related hearing loss.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Venu Pullabhatla ◽  
Amy L. Roberts ◽  
Myles J. Lewis ◽  
Daniele Mauro ◽  
David L. Morris ◽  
...  

AbstractThe omnigenic model of complex diseases stipulates that the majority of the heritability will be explained by the effects of common variation on genes in the periphery of core disease pathways. Rare variant associations, expected to explain far less of the heritability, may be enriched in core disease genes and thus will be instrumental in the understanding of complex disease pathogenesis and their potential therapeutic targets. Here, using complementary whole-exome sequencing (WES), high-density imputation, and in vitro cellular assays, we identify three candidate core genes in the pathogenesis of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE). Using extreme-phenotype sampling, we sequenced the exomes of 30 SLE parent-affected-offspring trios and identified 14 genes with missense de novo mutations (DNM), none of which are within the >80 SLE susceptibility loci implicated through genome-wide association studies (GWAS). In a follow-up cohort of 10,995 individuals of matched European ancestry, we imputed genotype data to the density of the combined UK10K-1000 genomes Phase III reference panel across the 14 candidate genes. We identify a burden of rare variants across PRKCD associated with SLE risk (P=0.0028), and across DNMT3A associated with two severe disease prognosis sub-phenotypes (P=0.0005 and P=0.0033). Both genes are functional candidates and significantly constrained against missense mutations in gene-level analyses, along with C1QTNF4. We further characterise the TNF-dependent functions of candidate gene C1QTNF4 on NF-κB activation and apoptosis, which are inhibited by the p.His198Gln DNM. Our results support extreme-phenotype sampling and DNM gene discovery to aid the search for core disease genes implicated through rare variation.Significance StatementRare variants, present in <1% in population, are expected to explain little of the heritability of complex diseases, such as Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE), yet are likely to identify core genes crucial to disease mechanisms. Their rarity, however, limits the power to show their statistical association with disease. Through sequencing the exomes of SLE patients and their parents, we identified non-inherited de novo mutations in 14 genes and hypothesised that these are prime candidates for harbouring additional disease-associated rare variants. We demonstrate that two of these genes also carry a significant excess of rare variants in an independent, large cohort of SLE patients. Our findings will influence future study designs in the search for the ‘missing heritability’ of complex diseases.


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