Cargando…

A novel method for detecting uniparental disomy from trio genotypes identifies a significant excess in children with developmental disorders

Exome sequencing of parent-offspring trios is a popular strategy for identifying causative genetic variants in children with rare diseases. This method owes its strength to the leveraging of inheritance information, which facilitates de novo variant calling, inference of compound heterozygosity, and...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: King, Daniel A., Fitzgerald, Tomas W., Miller, Ray, Canham, Natalie, Clayton-Smith, Jill, Johnson, Diana, Mansour, Sahar, Stewart, Fiona, Vasudevan, Pradeep, Hurles, Matthew E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3975066/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24356988
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gr.160465.113
_version_ 1782310078840307712
author King, Daniel A.
Fitzgerald, Tomas W.
Miller, Ray
Canham, Natalie
Clayton-Smith, Jill
Johnson, Diana
Mansour, Sahar
Stewart, Fiona
Vasudevan, Pradeep
Hurles, Matthew E.
author_facet King, Daniel A.
Fitzgerald, Tomas W.
Miller, Ray
Canham, Natalie
Clayton-Smith, Jill
Johnson, Diana
Mansour, Sahar
Stewart, Fiona
Vasudevan, Pradeep
Hurles, Matthew E.
author_sort King, Daniel A.
collection PubMed
description Exome sequencing of parent-offspring trios is a popular strategy for identifying causative genetic variants in children with rare diseases. This method owes its strength to the leveraging of inheritance information, which facilitates de novo variant calling, inference of compound heterozygosity, and the identification of inheritance anomalies. Uniparental disomy describes the inheritance of a homologous chromosome pair from only one parent. This aberration is important to detect in genetic disease studies because it can result in imprinting disorders and recessive diseases. We have developed a software tool to detect uniparental disomy from child–mother–father genotype data that uses a binomial test to identify chromosomes with a significant burden of uniparentally inherited genotypes. This tool is the first to read VCF-formatted genotypes, to perform integrated copy number filtering, and to use a statistical test inherently robust for use in platforms of varying genotyping density and noise characteristics. Simulations demonstrated superior accuracy compared with previously developed approaches. We implemented the method on 1057 trios from the Deciphering Developmental Disorders project, a trio-based rare disease study, and detected six validated events, a significant enrichment compared with the population prevalence of UPD (1 in 3500), suggesting that most of these events are pathogenic. One of these events represents a known imprinting disorder, and exome analyses have identified rare homozygous candidate variants, mainly in the isodisomic regions of UPD chromosomes, which, among other variants, provide targets for further genetic and functional evaluation.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3975066
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2014
publisher Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-39750662014-10-01 A novel method for detecting uniparental disomy from trio genotypes identifies a significant excess in children with developmental disorders King, Daniel A. Fitzgerald, Tomas W. Miller, Ray Canham, Natalie Clayton-Smith, Jill Johnson, Diana Mansour, Sahar Stewart, Fiona Vasudevan, Pradeep Hurles, Matthew E. Genome Res Method Exome sequencing of parent-offspring trios is a popular strategy for identifying causative genetic variants in children with rare diseases. This method owes its strength to the leveraging of inheritance information, which facilitates de novo variant calling, inference of compound heterozygosity, and the identification of inheritance anomalies. Uniparental disomy describes the inheritance of a homologous chromosome pair from only one parent. This aberration is important to detect in genetic disease studies because it can result in imprinting disorders and recessive diseases. We have developed a software tool to detect uniparental disomy from child–mother–father genotype data that uses a binomial test to identify chromosomes with a significant burden of uniparentally inherited genotypes. This tool is the first to read VCF-formatted genotypes, to perform integrated copy number filtering, and to use a statistical test inherently robust for use in platforms of varying genotyping density and noise characteristics. Simulations demonstrated superior accuracy compared with previously developed approaches. We implemented the method on 1057 trios from the Deciphering Developmental Disorders project, a trio-based rare disease study, and detected six validated events, a significant enrichment compared with the population prevalence of UPD (1 in 3500), suggesting that most of these events are pathogenic. One of these events represents a known imprinting disorder, and exome analyses have identified rare homozygous candidate variants, mainly in the isodisomic regions of UPD chromosomes, which, among other variants, provide targets for further genetic and functional evaluation. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 2014-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3975066/ /pubmed/24356988 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gr.160465.113 Text en © 2014 King et al.; Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This article is distributed exclusively by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press for the first six months after the full-issue publication date (see http://genome.cshlp.org/site/misc/terms.xhtml). After six months, it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/.
spellingShingle Method
King, Daniel A.
Fitzgerald, Tomas W.
Miller, Ray
Canham, Natalie
Clayton-Smith, Jill
Johnson, Diana
Mansour, Sahar
Stewart, Fiona
Vasudevan, Pradeep
Hurles, Matthew E.
A novel method for detecting uniparental disomy from trio genotypes identifies a significant excess in children with developmental disorders
title A novel method for detecting uniparental disomy from trio genotypes identifies a significant excess in children with developmental disorders
title_full A novel method for detecting uniparental disomy from trio genotypes identifies a significant excess in children with developmental disorders
title_fullStr A novel method for detecting uniparental disomy from trio genotypes identifies a significant excess in children with developmental disorders
title_full_unstemmed A novel method for detecting uniparental disomy from trio genotypes identifies a significant excess in children with developmental disorders
title_short A novel method for detecting uniparental disomy from trio genotypes identifies a significant excess in children with developmental disorders
title_sort novel method for detecting uniparental disomy from trio genotypes identifies a significant excess in children with developmental disorders
topic Method
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3975066/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24356988
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gr.160465.113
work_keys_str_mv AT kingdaniela anovelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT fitzgeraldtomasw anovelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT millerray anovelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT canhamnatalie anovelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT claytonsmithjill anovelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT johnsondiana anovelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT mansoursahar anovelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT stewartfiona anovelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT vasudevanpradeep anovelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT hurlesmatthewe anovelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT anovelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT kingdaniela novelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT fitzgeraldtomasw novelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT millerray novelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT canhamnatalie novelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT claytonsmithjill novelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT johnsondiana novelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT mansoursahar novelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT stewartfiona novelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT vasudevanpradeep novelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT hurlesmatthewe novelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders
AT novelmethodfordetectinguniparentaldisomyfromtriogenotypesidentifiesasignificantexcessinchildrenwithdevelopmentaldisorders