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The landscape of tolerated genetic variation in humans and primates.

Authors :
Gao H
Hamp T
Ede J
Schraiber JG
McRae J
Singer-Berk M
Yang Y
Dietrich A
Fiziev P
Kuderna L
Sundaram L
Wu Y
Adhikari A
Field Y
Chen C
Batzoglou S
Aguet F
Lemire G
Reimers R
Balick D
Janiak MC
Kuhlwilm M
Orkin JD
Manu S
Valenzuela A
Bergman J
Rouselle M
Silva FE
Agueda L
Blanc J
Gut M
de Vries D
Goodhead I
Harris RA
Raveendran M
Jensen A
Chuma IS
Horvath J
Hvilsom C
Juan D
Frandsen P
de Melo FR
Bertuol F
Byrne H
Sampaio I
Farias I
do Amaral JV
Messias M
da Silva MNF
Trivedi M
Rossi R
Hrbek T
Andriaholinirina N
Rabarivola CJ
Zaramody A
Jolly CJ
Phillips-Conroy J
Wilkerson G
Abee C
Simmons JH
Fernandez-Duque E
Kanthaswamy S
Shiferaw F
Wu D
Zhou L
Shao Y
Zhang G
Keyyu JD
Knauf S
Le MD
Lizano E
Merker S
Navarro A
Batallion T
Nadler T
Khor CC
Lee J
Tan P
Lim WK
Kitchener AC
Zinner D
Gut I
Melin A
Guschanski K
Schierup MH
Beck RMD
Umapathy G
Roos C
Boubli JP
Lek M
Sunyaev S
O'Donnell A
Rehm H
Xu J
Rogers J
Marques-Bonet T
Kai-How Farh K
Source :
BioRxiv : the preprint server for biology [bioRxiv] 2023 May 02. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 May 02.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Personalized genome sequencing has revealed millions of genetic differences between individuals, but our understanding of their clinical relevance remains largely incomplete. To systematically decipher the effects of human genetic variants, we obtained whole genome sequencing data for 809 individuals from 233 primate species, and identified 4.3 million common protein-altering variants with orthologs in human. We show that these variants can be inferred to have non-deleterious effects in human based on their presence at high allele frequencies in other primate populations. We use this resource to classify 6% of all possible human protein-altering variants as likely benign and impute the pathogenicity of the remaining 94% of variants with deep learning, achieving state-of-the-art accuracy for diagnosing pathogenic variants in patients with genetic diseases.<br />One Sentence Summary: Deep learning classifier trained on 4.3 million common primate missense variants predicts variant pathogenicity in humans.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2692-8205
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
37205491
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.05.01.538953