Exome chip association study excluded the involvement of rare coding variants with large effect sizes in the etiology of anorectal malformations
收藏Figshare2019-05-28 更新2026-04-29 收录
下载链接:
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Exome_chip_association_study_excluded_the_involvement_of_rare_coding_variants_with_large_effect_sizes_in_the_etiology_of_anorectal_malformations/8193695
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
IntroductionAnorectal malformations (ARM) are rare congenital malformations, resulting from disturbed hindgut development. A genetic etiology has been suggested, but evidence for the involvement of specific genes is scarce. We evaluated the contribution of rare and low-frequency coding variants in ARM etiology, assuming a multifactorial model.MethodsWe analyzed 568 Caucasian ARM patients and 1,860 population-based controls using the Illumina HumanExome Beadchip array, which contains >240,000 rare and low-frequency coding variants. GenomeStudio clustering and calling was followed by re-calling of ‘no-calls’ using zCall for patients and controls simultaneously. Single variant and gene-based analyses were performed to identify statistically significant associations, applying Bonferroni correction. Following an extra quality control step, candidate variants were selected for validation using Sanger sequencing.ResultsWhen we applied a MAF of ≥1.0%, no variants or genes showed statistically significant associations with ARM. Using a MAF cut-off at 0.4%, 13 variants initially reached statistical significance, but had to be discarded upon further inspection: ten variants represented calling errors of the software, while the minor alleles of the remaining three variants were not confirmed by Sanger sequencing.ConclusionOur results show that rare and low-frequency coding variants with large effect sizes, present on the exome chip do not contribute to ARM etiology.
创建时间:
2019-05-28



