4.6 Article

Haplotype Phasing and Inheritance of Copy Number Variants in Nuclear Families

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0122713

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Estonian Ministry of Education and Research [SF0180026s09]
  2. European Union grant through the European Regional Development Fund through the Estonian Centre of Excellence in Genomics
  3. Finnish Cultural Foundation
  4. Estonian Ministry of Education and Research Core Grants [SF0180022s12]
  5. European Union through the European Regional Development Fund (project HAPPY PREGNANCY) [3.2.0701.12-0047]
  6. Estonian Science Foundation Grant [ETF9030]
  7. FP7 program (ENGAGE)
  8. FP7 program (OPENGENE)
  9. Estonian Government [SF0180142s08]
  10. Estonian Research Roadmap through Estonian Ministry of Education and Research
  11. Center of Excellence in Genomics (EXCEGEN)
  12. University of Tartu [SP1GVARENG]
  13. Estonian Research Council [IUT2-2]
  14. European Regional Development Fund

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DNA copy number variants (CNVs) that alter the copy number of a particular DNA segment in the genome play an important role in human phenotypic variability and disease susceptibility. A number of CNVs overlapping with genes have been shown to confer risk to a variety of human diseases thus highlighting the relevance of addressing the variability of CNVs at a higher resolution. So far, it has not been possible to deterministically infer the allelic composition of different haplotypes present within the CNV regions. We have developed a novel computational method, called PiCNV, which enables to resolve the haplotype sequence composition within CNV regions in nuclear families based on SNP genotyping microarray data. The algorithm allows to i) phase normal and CNV-carrying haplotypes in the copy number variable regions, ii) resolve the allelic copies of rearranged DNA sequence within the haplotypes and iii) infer the heritability of identified haplotypes in trios or larger nuclear families. To our knowledge this is the first program available that can deterministically phase null, mono-, di-, tri- and tetraploid genotypes in CNV loci. We applied our method to study the composition and inheritance of haplotypes in CNV regions of 30 HapMap Yoruban trios and 34 Estonian families. For 93.6% of the CNV loci, PiCNV enabled to unambiguously phase normal and CNV-carrying haplotypes and follow their transmission in the corresponding families. Furthermore, allelic composition analysis identified the co-occurrence of alternative allelic copies within 66.7% of haplotypes carrying copy number gains. We also observed less frequent transmission of CNV-carrying haplotypes from parents to children compared to normal haplotypes and identified an emergence of several de novo deletions and duplications in the offspring.

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