A Genocentric Approach to Discovery of Mendelian Disorders.

dc.contributor.author

Hansen, Adam W

dc.contributor.author

Murugan, Mullai

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Li, He

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Khayat, Michael M

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Wang, Liwen

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Rosenfeld, Jill

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Andrews, B Kim

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Jhangiani, Shalini N

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Coban Akdemir, Zeynep H

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Sedlazeck, Fritz J

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Ashley-Koch, Allison E

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Liu, Pengfei

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Muzny, Donna M

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Task Force for Neonatal Genomics

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Davis, Erica E

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Katsanis, Nicholas

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Sabo, Aniko

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Posey, Jennifer E

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Yang, Yaping

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Wangler, Michael F

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Eng, Christine M

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Sutton, V Reid

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Lupski, James R

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Boerwinkle, Eric

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Gibbs, Richard A

dc.date.accessioned

2022-03-23T15:20:50Z

dc.date.available

2022-03-23T15:20:50Z

dc.date.issued

2019-11

dc.date.updated

2022-03-23T15:20:50Z

dc.description.abstract

The advent of inexpensive, clinical exome sequencing (ES) has led to the accumulation of genetic data from thousands of samples from individuals affected with a wide range of diseases, but for whom the underlying genetic and molecular etiology of their clinical phenotype remains unknown. In many cases, detailed phenotypes are unavailable or poorly recorded and there is little family history to guide study. To accelerate discovery, we integrated ES data from 18,696 individuals referred for suspected Mendelian disease, together with relatives, in an Apache Hadoop data lake (Hadoop Architecture Lake of Exomes [HARLEE]) and implemented a genocentric analysis that rapidly identified 154 genes harboring variants suspected to cause Mendelian disorders. The approach did not rely on case-specific phenotypic classifications but was driven by optimization of gene- and variant-level filter parameters utilizing historical Mendelian disease-gene association discovery data. Variants in 19 of the 154 candidate genes were subsequently reported as causative of a Mendelian trait and additional data support the association of all other candidate genes with disease endpoints.

dc.identifier

S0002-9297(19)30388-X

dc.identifier.issn

0002-9297

dc.identifier.issn

1537-6605

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24585

dc.language

eng

dc.publisher

Elsevier BV

dc.relation.ispartof

American journal of human genetics

dc.relation.isversionof

10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.09.027

dc.subject

Task Force for Neonatal Genomics

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Humans

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Genetic Diseases, Inborn

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Genetic Predisposition to Disease

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Pedigree

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Genomics

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Phenotype

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Databases, Genetic

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Genetic Variation

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Exome

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Whole Exome Sequencing

dc.title

A Genocentric Approach to Discovery of Mendelian Disorders.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Ashley-Koch, Allison E|0000-0001-5409-9155

duke.contributor.orcid

Davis, Erica E|0000-0002-2412-8397

pubs.begin-page

974

pubs.end-page

986

pubs.issue

5

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Duke

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Sanford School of Public Policy

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Pediatrics

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Medicine, Nephrology

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Pediatrics, Medical Genetics

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pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

105

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