Publication | Open Access
Leveraging base-pair mammalian constraint to understand genetic variation and human disease
111
Citations
114
References
2023
Year
GeneticsPathologyGenetic FoundationDisease Gene IdentificationGenomicsClinical GeneticsGenome-wide Association StudyGenetic AnalysisVariant AnnotationHuman GenomeEvolutionary ConstraintPublic HealthBase-pair Mammalian ConstraintVariant InterpretationPersonal GenomicsHuman DiseaseStatistical GeneticsGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsFunctional GenomicsBioinformaticsGenetic BasisAllelic VariantLinkage DisequilibriumEvolutionary BiologyComplex DiseaseSystems BiologyMedicine
Thousands of genomic regions have been associated with heritable human diseases, but attempts to elucidate biological mechanisms are impeded by an inability to discern which genomic positions are functionally important. Evolutionary constraint is a powerful predictor of function, agnostic to cell type or disease mechanism. Single-base phyloP scores from 240 mammals identified 3.3% of the human genome as significantly constrained and likely functional. We compared phyloP scores to genome annotation, association studies, copy-number variation, clinical genetics findings, and cancer data. Constrained positions are enriched for variants that explain common disease heritability more than other functional annotations. Our results improve variant annotation but also highlight that the regulatory landscape of the human genome still needs to be further explored and linked to disease.
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