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Rare Variants in Ischemic Stroke: An Exome Pilot Study

The genetic architecture of ischemic stroke is complex and is likely to include rare or low frequency variants with high penetrance and large effect sizes. Such variants are likely to provide important insights into disease pathogenesis compared to common variants with small effect sizes. Because a...

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Autores principales: Cole, John W., Stine, O. Colin, Liu, Xinyue, Pratap, Abhishek, Cheng, Yuching, Tallon, Luke J., Sadzewicz, Lisa K., Dueker, Nicole, Wozniak, Marcella A., Stern, Barney J., Meschia, James F., Mitchell, Braxton D., Kittner, Steven J., O'Connell, Jeffrey R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3334983/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22536414
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0035591
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author Cole, John W.
Stine, O. Colin
Liu, Xinyue
Pratap, Abhishek
Cheng, Yuching
Tallon, Luke J.
Sadzewicz, Lisa K.
Dueker, Nicole
Wozniak, Marcella A.
Stern, Barney J.
Meschia, James F.
Mitchell, Braxton D.
Kittner, Steven J.
O'Connell, Jeffrey R.
author_facet Cole, John W.
Stine, O. Colin
Liu, Xinyue
Pratap, Abhishek
Cheng, Yuching
Tallon, Luke J.
Sadzewicz, Lisa K.
Dueker, Nicole
Wozniak, Marcella A.
Stern, Barney J.
Meschia, James F.
Mitchell, Braxton D.
Kittner, Steven J.
O'Connell, Jeffrey R.
author_sort Cole, John W.
collection PubMed
description The genetic architecture of ischemic stroke is complex and is likely to include rare or low frequency variants with high penetrance and large effect sizes. Such variants are likely to provide important insights into disease pathogenesis compared to common variants with small effect sizes. Because a significant portion of human functional variation may derive from the protein-coding portion of genes we undertook a pilot study to identify variation across the human exome (i.e., the coding exons across the entire human genome) in 10 ischemic stroke cases. Our efforts focused on evaluating the feasibility and identifying the difficulties in this type of research as it applies to ischemic stroke. The cases included 8 African-Americans and 2 Caucasians selected on the basis of similar stroke subtypes and by implementing a case selection algorithm that emphasized the genetic contribution of stroke risk. Following construction of paired-end sequencing libraries, all predicted human exons in each sample were captured and sequenced. Sequencing generated an average of 25.5 million read pairs (75 bp×2) and 3.8 Gbp per sample. After passing quality filters, screening the exomes against dbSNP demonstrated an average of 2839 novel SNPs among African-Americans and 1105 among Caucasians. In an aggregate analysis, 48 genes were identified to have at least one rare variant across all stroke cases. One gene, CSN3, identified by screening our prior GWAS results in conjunction with our exome results, was found to contain an interesting coding polymorphism as well as containing excess rare variation as compared with the other genes evaluated. In conclusion, while rare coding variants may predispose to the risk of ischemic stroke, this fact has yet to be definitively proven. Our study demonstrates the complexities of such research and highlights that while exome data can be obtained, the optimal analytical methods have yet to be determined.
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spelling pubmed-33349832012-04-25 Rare Variants in Ischemic Stroke: An Exome Pilot Study Cole, John W. Stine, O. Colin Liu, Xinyue Pratap, Abhishek Cheng, Yuching Tallon, Luke J. Sadzewicz, Lisa K. Dueker, Nicole Wozniak, Marcella A. Stern, Barney J. Meschia, James F. Mitchell, Braxton D. Kittner, Steven J. O'Connell, Jeffrey R. PLoS One Research Article The genetic architecture of ischemic stroke is complex and is likely to include rare or low frequency variants with high penetrance and large effect sizes. Such variants are likely to provide important insights into disease pathogenesis compared to common variants with small effect sizes. Because a significant portion of human functional variation may derive from the protein-coding portion of genes we undertook a pilot study to identify variation across the human exome (i.e., the coding exons across the entire human genome) in 10 ischemic stroke cases. Our efforts focused on evaluating the feasibility and identifying the difficulties in this type of research as it applies to ischemic stroke. The cases included 8 African-Americans and 2 Caucasians selected on the basis of similar stroke subtypes and by implementing a case selection algorithm that emphasized the genetic contribution of stroke risk. Following construction of paired-end sequencing libraries, all predicted human exons in each sample were captured and sequenced. Sequencing generated an average of 25.5 million read pairs (75 bp×2) and 3.8 Gbp per sample. After passing quality filters, screening the exomes against dbSNP demonstrated an average of 2839 novel SNPs among African-Americans and 1105 among Caucasians. In an aggregate analysis, 48 genes were identified to have at least one rare variant across all stroke cases. One gene, CSN3, identified by screening our prior GWAS results in conjunction with our exome results, was found to contain an interesting coding polymorphism as well as containing excess rare variation as compared with the other genes evaluated. In conclusion, while rare coding variants may predispose to the risk of ischemic stroke, this fact has yet to be definitively proven. Our study demonstrates the complexities of such research and highlights that while exome data can be obtained, the optimal analytical methods have yet to be determined. Public Library of Science 2012-04-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3334983/ /pubmed/22536414 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0035591 Text en This is an open-access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 public domain dedication. https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cole, John W.
Stine, O. Colin
Liu, Xinyue
Pratap, Abhishek
Cheng, Yuching
Tallon, Luke J.
Sadzewicz, Lisa K.
Dueker, Nicole
Wozniak, Marcella A.
Stern, Barney J.
Meschia, James F.
Mitchell, Braxton D.
Kittner, Steven J.
O'Connell, Jeffrey R.
Rare Variants in Ischemic Stroke: An Exome Pilot Study
title Rare Variants in Ischemic Stroke: An Exome Pilot Study
title_full Rare Variants in Ischemic Stroke: An Exome Pilot Study
title_fullStr Rare Variants in Ischemic Stroke: An Exome Pilot Study
title_full_unstemmed Rare Variants in Ischemic Stroke: An Exome Pilot Study
title_short Rare Variants in Ischemic Stroke: An Exome Pilot Study
title_sort rare variants in ischemic stroke: an exome pilot study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3334983/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22536414
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0035591
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