Publication | Open Access
An extended set of yeast-based functional assays accurately identifies human disease mutations
130
Citations
73
References
2016
Year
EngineeringGeneticsMolecular BiologyHuman Disease GenesExtended SetGenomicsDisease Gene IdentificationYeast-based Functional AssaysGenome-wide Association StudyGenetic AnalysisComputational GenomicsYeastMolecular DiagnosticsHuman Disease MutationsVariant InterpretationPathway AnalysisFunctional GenomicsBioinformaticsExperimental Functional AssaysAllelic VariantSomatic VariantIndividual Human GenomesComputational BiologySystems BiologyMedicineGenome Editing
We can now routinely identify coding variants within individual human genomes. A pressing challenge is to determine which variants disrupt the function of disease-associated genes. Both experimental and computational methods exist to predict pathogenicity of human genetic variation. However, a systematic performance comparison between them has been lacking. Therefore, we developed and exploited a panel of 26 yeast-based functional complementation assays to measure the impact of 179 variants (101 disease- and 78 non-disease-associated variants) from 22 human disease genes. Using the resulting reference standard, we show that experimental functional assays in a 1-billion-year diverged model organism can identify pathogenic alleles with significantly higher precision and specificity than current computational methods.
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