4.8 Article

Quantifying concordant genetic effects of de novo mutations on multiple disorders

Journal

ELIFE
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

eLIFE SCIENCES PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.75551

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [12071243, DMS 1902903]
  2. National Institutes of Health [R03HD100883, R01GM134005]
  3. Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project [2017SHZDZX01]
  4. Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation
  5. Waisman Center pilot grant program at University of Wisconsin-Madison

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This study introduces a novel statistical framework called EncoreDNM to quantify shared genetic effects between two disorders characterized by concordant enrichment of DNMs in the exome. By applying EncoreDNM to DNM data of nine disorders, abundant pairwise enrichment correlations are identified. These results suggest that EncoreDNM may have broad applications in DNM studies.
Exome sequencing on tens of thousands of parent-proband trios has identified numerous deleterious de novo mutations (DNMs) and implicated risk genes for many disorders. Recent studies have suggested shared genes and pathways are enriched for DNMs across multiple disorders. However, existing analytic strategies only focus on genes that reach statistical significance for multiple disorders and require large trio samples in each study. As a result, these methods are not able to characterize the full landscape of genetic sharing due to polygenicity and incomplete penetrance. In this work, we introduce EncoreDNM, a novel statistical framework to quantify shared genetic effects between two disorders characterized by concordant enrichment of DNMs in the exome. EncoreDNM makes use of exome-wide, summary-level DNM data, including genes that do not reach statistical significance in single-disorder analysis, to evaluate the overall and annotation-partitioned genetic sharing between two disorders. Applying EncoreDNM to DNM data of nine disorders, we identified abundant pairwise enrichment correlations, especially in genes intolerant to pathogenic mutations and genes highly expressed in fetal tissues. These results suggest that EncoreDNM improves current analytic approaches and may have broad applications in DNM studies.

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