Negligible impact of rare autoimmune-locus coding-region variants on missing heritability
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journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 14:15 authored by K. A. Hunt, V. Mistry, F. Capon, A. Compston, S. C. L. Gough, L. Jostins, Y. Kong, J. C. Lee, M. Lek, D. G. MacArthur, J. C. Mansfield, C. G. Mathew, N. A. Bockett, C. A. Mein, M. Mirza, S. Nutland, S. Onengut-Gumuscu, E. Papouli, M. Parkes, S. S. Rich, S. Sawcer, J. Satsangi, Matthew SimmondsMatthew Simmonds, T. Ahmad, R. C. Trembath, N. M. Walker, E. Wozniak, J. A. Todd, M. A. Simpson, V. Plagnol, D. A. van Heel, M. Ban, J. N. Barker, J. C. Barrett, H. Blackburn, O. J. Brand, O. Burren<p>Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified common variants of modest-effect size at hundreds of loci for common autoimmune diseases; however, a substantial fraction of heritability remains unexplained, to which rare variants may contribute. To discover rare variants and test them for association with a phenotype, most studies re-sequence a small initial sample size and then genotype the discovered variants in a larger sample set. This approach fails to analyse a large fraction of the rare variants present in the entire sample set. Here we perform simultaneous amplicon-sequencing-based variant discovery and genotyping for coding exons of 25 GWAS risk genes in 41,911 UK residents of white European origin, comprising 24,892 subjects with six autoimmune disease phenotypes and 17,019 controls, and show that rare coding-region variants at known loci have a negligible role in common autoimmune disease susceptibility. These results do not support the rare-variant synthetic genome-wide-association hypothesis (in which unobserved rare causal variants lead to association detected at common tag variants). Many known autoimmune disease risk loci contain multiple, independently associated, common and low-frequency variants, and so genes at these loci are a priori stronger candidates for harbouring rare coding-region variants than other genes. Our data indicate that the missing heritability for common autoimmune diseases may not be attributable to the rare coding-region variant portion of the allelic spectrum, but perhaps, as others have proposed, may be a result of many common-variant loci of weak effect. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.</p>
History
School affiliated with
- Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)
Publication Title
NatureVolume
498Issue
7453Pages/Article Number
232-235Publisher
Nature Publishing GroupExternal DOI
ISSN
0028-0836eISSN
1476-4687Date Submitted
2016-03-19Date Accepted
2013-04-08Date of First Publication
2013-05-22Date of Final Publication
2013-06-13Date Document First Uploaded
2016-03-16ePrints ID
22598Usage metrics
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Keywords
alleleampliconarticleautoimmune diseaseAutoimmune Diseasesautoimmunitycontrolled studydisease associationdisease incidenceEuropeEuropean Continental Ancestry GroupexonExonsGene Frequencygene linkage disequilibriumgene locusGeneticgenetic analysisgenetic associationGenetic Predisposition to Diseasegenetic riskgenetic variabilityGenetic VariationgenomeGenome-Wide Association StudygenotypeGreat Britainheritabilityhigh throughput sequencinghumanHumansmajor clinical studyModelsMutationOpen Reading Framesphenotypepolymerase chain reactionpriority journalSample Sizesamplingsequence analysissingle nucleotide polymorphism
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