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Systems biology analysis of human genomes points to key pathways conferring spina bifida risk

Spina bifida (SB) is a debilitating birth defect caused by multiple gene and environment interactions. Though SB shows non-Mendelian inheritance, genetic factors contribute to an estimated 70% of cases. Nevertheless, identifying human mutations conferring SB risk is challenging due to its relative r...

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Autores principales: Aguiar-Pulido, Vanessa, Wolujewicz, Paul, Martinez-Fundichely, Alexander, Elhaik, Eran, Thareja, Gaurav, Abdel Aleem, Alice, Chalhoub, Nader, Cuykendall, Tawny, Al-Zamer, Jamel, Lei, Yunping, El-Bashir, Haitham, Musser, James M., Al-Kaabi, Abdulla, Shaw, Gary M., Khurana, Ekta, Suhre, Karsten, Mason, Christopher E., Elemento, Olivier, Finnell, Richard H., Ross, M. Elizabeth
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: National Academy of Sciences 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8713748/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34916285
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2106844118
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author Aguiar-Pulido, Vanessa
Wolujewicz, Paul
Martinez-Fundichely, Alexander
Elhaik, Eran
Thareja, Gaurav
Abdel Aleem, Alice
Chalhoub, Nader
Cuykendall, Tawny
Al-Zamer, Jamel
Lei, Yunping
El-Bashir, Haitham
Musser, James M.
Al-Kaabi, Abdulla
Shaw, Gary M.
Khurana, Ekta
Suhre, Karsten
Mason, Christopher E.
Elemento, Olivier
Finnell, Richard H.
Ross, M. Elizabeth
author_facet Aguiar-Pulido, Vanessa
Wolujewicz, Paul
Martinez-Fundichely, Alexander
Elhaik, Eran
Thareja, Gaurav
Abdel Aleem, Alice
Chalhoub, Nader
Cuykendall, Tawny
Al-Zamer, Jamel
Lei, Yunping
El-Bashir, Haitham
Musser, James M.
Al-Kaabi, Abdulla
Shaw, Gary M.
Khurana, Ekta
Suhre, Karsten
Mason, Christopher E.
Elemento, Olivier
Finnell, Richard H.
Ross, M. Elizabeth
author_sort Aguiar-Pulido, Vanessa
collection PubMed
description Spina bifida (SB) is a debilitating birth defect caused by multiple gene and environment interactions. Though SB shows non-Mendelian inheritance, genetic factors contribute to an estimated 70% of cases. Nevertheless, identifying human mutations conferring SB risk is challenging due to its relative rarity, genetic heterogeneity, incomplete penetrance, and environmental influences that hamper genome-wide association studies approaches to untargeted discovery. Thus, SB genetic studies may suffer from population substructure and/or selection bias introduced by typical candidate gene searches. We report a population based, ancestry-matched whole-genome sequence analysis of SB genetic predisposition using a systems biology strategy to interrogate 298 case-control subject genomes (149 pairs). Genes that were enriched in likely gene disrupting (LGD), rare protein-coding variants were subjected to machine learning analysis to identify genes in which LGD variants occur with a different frequency in cases versus controls and so discriminate between these groups. Those genes with high discriminatory potential for SB significantly enriched pathways pertaining to carbon metabolism, inflammation, innate immunity, cytoskeletal regulation, and essential transcriptional regulation consistent with their having impact on the pathogenesis of human SB. Additionally, an interrogation of conserved noncoding sequences identified robust variant enrichment in regulatory regions of several transcription factors critical to embryonic development. This genome-wide perspective offers an effective approach to the interrogation of coding and noncoding sequence variant contributions to rare complex genetic disorders.
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spelling pubmed-87137482022-01-21 Systems biology analysis of human genomes points to key pathways conferring spina bifida risk Aguiar-Pulido, Vanessa Wolujewicz, Paul Martinez-Fundichely, Alexander Elhaik, Eran Thareja, Gaurav Abdel Aleem, Alice Chalhoub, Nader Cuykendall, Tawny Al-Zamer, Jamel Lei, Yunping El-Bashir, Haitham Musser, James M. Al-Kaabi, Abdulla Shaw, Gary M. Khurana, Ekta Suhre, Karsten Mason, Christopher E. Elemento, Olivier Finnell, Richard H. Ross, M. Elizabeth Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Biological Sciences Spina bifida (SB) is a debilitating birth defect caused by multiple gene and environment interactions. Though SB shows non-Mendelian inheritance, genetic factors contribute to an estimated 70% of cases. Nevertheless, identifying human mutations conferring SB risk is challenging due to its relative rarity, genetic heterogeneity, incomplete penetrance, and environmental influences that hamper genome-wide association studies approaches to untargeted discovery. Thus, SB genetic studies may suffer from population substructure and/or selection bias introduced by typical candidate gene searches. We report a population based, ancestry-matched whole-genome sequence analysis of SB genetic predisposition using a systems biology strategy to interrogate 298 case-control subject genomes (149 pairs). Genes that were enriched in likely gene disrupting (LGD), rare protein-coding variants were subjected to machine learning analysis to identify genes in which LGD variants occur with a different frequency in cases versus controls and so discriminate between these groups. Those genes with high discriminatory potential for SB significantly enriched pathways pertaining to carbon metabolism, inflammation, innate immunity, cytoskeletal regulation, and essential transcriptional regulation consistent with their having impact on the pathogenesis of human SB. Additionally, an interrogation of conserved noncoding sequences identified robust variant enrichment in regulatory regions of several transcription factors critical to embryonic development. This genome-wide perspective offers an effective approach to the interrogation of coding and noncoding sequence variant contributions to rare complex genetic disorders. National Academy of Sciences 2021-12-16 2021-12-21 /pmc/articles/PMC8713748/ /pubmed/34916285 http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2106844118 Text en Copyright © 2021 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This open access article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Biological Sciences
Aguiar-Pulido, Vanessa
Wolujewicz, Paul
Martinez-Fundichely, Alexander
Elhaik, Eran
Thareja, Gaurav
Abdel Aleem, Alice
Chalhoub, Nader
Cuykendall, Tawny
Al-Zamer, Jamel
Lei, Yunping
El-Bashir, Haitham
Musser, James M.
Al-Kaabi, Abdulla
Shaw, Gary M.
Khurana, Ekta
Suhre, Karsten
Mason, Christopher E.
Elemento, Olivier
Finnell, Richard H.
Ross, M. Elizabeth
Systems biology analysis of human genomes points to key pathways conferring spina bifida risk
title Systems biology analysis of human genomes points to key pathways conferring spina bifida risk
title_full Systems biology analysis of human genomes points to key pathways conferring spina bifida risk
title_fullStr Systems biology analysis of human genomes points to key pathways conferring spina bifida risk
title_full_unstemmed Systems biology analysis of human genomes points to key pathways conferring spina bifida risk
title_short Systems biology analysis of human genomes points to key pathways conferring spina bifida risk
title_sort systems biology analysis of human genomes points to key pathways conferring spina bifida risk
topic Biological Sciences
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8713748/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34916285
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2106844118
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