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Whole-genome re-sequencing for the identification of high contribution susceptibility gene variants in patients with type 2 diabetes

Authors :
Xianliang Hou
Yueying Xiang
Yong Dai
Xiaobing Wang
Xiaojuan Sun
Minglin Ou
Weiguo Sui
Source :
Molecular Medicine Reports
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Spandidos Publications, 2016.

Abstract

There is increasing evidence that several genes are associated with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes (T2D); genome-wide association investigations and whole-genome re-sequencing investigations offer a useful approach for the identification of genes involved in common human diseases. To further investigate which polymorphisms confer susceptibility to T2D, the present study screened for high-contribution susceptibility gene variants Chinese patients with T2D using whole-genome re-sequencing with DNA pooling. In total, 100 Chinese individuals with T2D and 100 healthy Chinese individuals were analyzed using whole-genome re-sequencing using DNA pooling. To minimize the likelihood of systematic bias in sampling, paired-end libraries with an insert size of 500 bp were prepared for in T2D in all samples, which were then subjected to whole-genome sequencing. Each library contained four lanes. The average sequencing depth was 35.70. In the present study, 1.36 GB of clean sequence data were generated, and the resulting calculated T2D genome consensus sequence covered 99.88% of the hg19 sequence. A total of 3,974,307 single nucleotide polymorphisms were identified, of which 99.88% were in the dbSNP database. The present study also found 642,189 insertions and deletions, 5,590 structure variants (SVs), 4,713 copy number variants (CNVs) and 13,049 single nucleotide variants. A total of 1,884 somatic CNVs and 74 somatic SVs were significantly different between the cases and controls. Therefore, the present study provided validation of whole-genome re-sequencing using the DNA pooling approach. It also generated a whole-genome re-sequencing genotype database for future investigations of T2D.

Details

ISSN :
17913004 and 17912997
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Medicine Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6d3741e2ae910ddc91d73d820d038321