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Whole-genome sequencing of 1,171 elderly admixed individuals from São Paulo, Brazil.

Authors :
Naslavsky, Michel S.
Scliar, Marilia O.
Yamamoto, Guilherme L.
Wang, Jaqueline Yu Ting
Zverinova, Stepanka
Karp, Tatiana
Nunes, Kelly
Ceroni, José Ricardo Magliocco
de Carvalho, Diego Lima
da Silva Simões, Carlos Eduardo
Bozoklian, Daniel
Nonaka, Ricardo
dos Santos Brito Silva, Nayane
da Silva Souza, Andreia
de Souza Andrade, Heloísa
Passos, Marília Rodrigues Silva
Castro, Camila Ferreira Bannwart
Mendes-Junior, Celso T.
Mercuri, Rafael L. V.
Miller, Thiago L. A.
Source :
Nature Communications; 3/4/2022, Vol. 13 Issue 1, p1-11, 11p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

As whole-genome sequencing (WGS) becomes the gold standard tool for studying population genomics and medical applications, data on diverse non-European and admixed individuals are still scarce. Here, we present a high-coverage WGS dataset of 1,171 highly admixed elderly Brazilians from a census-based cohort, providing over 76 million variants, of which ~2 million are absent from large public databases. WGS enables identification of ~2,000 previously undescribed mobile element insertions without previous description, nearly 5 Mb of genomic segments absent from the human genome reference, and over 140 alleles from HLA genes absent from public resources. We reclassify and curate pathogenicity assertions for nearly four hundred variants in genes associated with dominantly-inherited Mendelian disorders and calculate the incidence for selected recessive disorders, demonstrating the clinical usefulness of the present study. Finally, we observe that whole-genome and HLA imputation could be significantly improved compared to available datasets since rare variation represents the largest proportion of input from WGS. These results demonstrate that even smaller sample sizes of underrepresented populations bring relevant data for genomic studies, especially when exploring analyses allowed only by WGS. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) data on non-European and admixed individuals remains scarce. Here, the authors analyse WGS data from 1,171 admixed elderly Brazilians from a census cohort, characterising population-specific genetic variation and exploring the clinical utility of this expanded dataset. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
155625476
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-28648-3