4.6 Article

Genotypic and phenotypic landscapes of 51 pharmacogenes derived from whole-genome sequencing in a Thai population

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0263621

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Chulalongkorn University [764002-HE01]
  2. Thailand Science Research and Innovation Fund [CU_FRB640001_01_30_10]
  3. Thailand Research Fund [DPG6180001]
  4. Health Systems Research Institute [64-132]

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Differences in drug responses among individuals can be attributed to genetic variations in pharmacogenes, which vary among populations. In this study, genome sequencing of Thai individuals revealed multiple pharmacogenes with variant phenotypes, including several high impact variants not previously reported. These findings provide valuable information for implementing pharmacogenetic testing in Thailand and other Southeast Asian countries, bringing personalized medicine a step closer.
Differences in drug responses in individuals are partly due to genetic variations in pharmacogenes, which differ among populations. Here, genome sequencing of 171 unrelated Thai individuals from all regions of Thailand was used to call star alleles of 51 pharmacogenes by Stargazer, determine allele and genotype frequencies, predict phenotype and compare high-impact variant frequencies between Thai and other populations. Three control genes, EGFR, VDR, and RYR1, were used, giving consistent results. Every individual had at least three genes with variant or altered phenotype. Forty of the 51 pharmacogenes had at least one individual with variant or altered phenotype. Moreover, thirteen genes had at least 25% of individuals with variant or altered phenotype including SLCO1B3 (97.08%), CYP3A5 (88.3%), CYP2C19 (60.82%), CYP2A6 (60.2%), SULT1A1 (56.14%), G6PD (54.39%), CYP4B1 (50.00%), CYP2D6 (48.65%), CYP2F1 (46.41%), NAT2 (40.35%), SLCO2B1 (28.95%), UGT1A1 (28.07%), and SLCO1B1 (26.79%). Allele frequencies of high impact variants from our samples were most similar to East Asian. Remarkably, we identified twenty predicted high impact variants which have not previously been reported. Our results provide information that contributes to the implementation of pharmacogenetic testing in Thailand and other Southeast Asian countries, bringing a step closer to personalized medicine.

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