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Human knockouts and phenotypic analysis in a cohort with a high rate of consanguinity

Authors :
Saleheen, D
Natarajan, P
Armean, IM
Zhao, W
Rasheed, A
Khetarpal, SA
Won, H-H
Karczewski, KJ
O'Donnell-Luria, AH
Samocha, KE
Weisburd, B
Gupta, N
Zaidi, M
Samuel, M
Imran, A
Abbas, S
Majeed, F
Ishaq, M
Akhtar, S
Trindade, K
Mucksavage, M
Qamar, N
Zaman, KS
Yaqoob, Z
Saghir, T
Rizvi, SNH
Memon, A
Hayyat Mallick, N
Rasheed, SZ
Memon, F-U-R
Mahmood, K
Ahmed, N
Do, R
Krauss, RM
MacArthur, DG
Gabriel, S
Lander, ES
Daly, MJ
Frossard, P
Danesh, J
Rader, DJ
Kathiresan, S
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group

Abstract

A major goal of biomedicine is to understand the function of every gene in the human genome. Loss-of-function mutations can disrupt both copies of a given gene in humans and phenotypic analysis of such 'human knockouts' can provide insight into gene function. Consanguineous unions are more likely to result in offspring carrying homozygous loss-of-function mutations. In Pakistan, consanguinity rates are notably high. Here we sequence the protein-coding regions of 10,503 adult participants in the Pakistan Risk of Myocardial Infarction Study (PROMIS), designed to understand the determinants of cardiometabolic diseases in individuals from South Asia. We identified individuals carrying homozygous predicted loss-of-function (pLoF) mutations, and performed phenotypic analysis involving more than 200 biochemical and disease traits. We enumerated 49,138 rare (

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5fc3bfdce49d9974ae5a34b8f0ee03e4