A fine‐scale genetic map of the Japanese population

Author:

Takayama Jun123,Makino Satoshi2,Funayama Takamitsu23,Ueki Masao3,Narita Akira2,Murakami Keiko4,Orui Masatsugu45,Ishikuro Mami45,Obara Taku45, ,Kuriyama Shinichi45,Yamamoto Masayuki2,Tamiya Gen123

Affiliation:

1. Department of AI and Innovative Medicine Tohoku University School of Medicine Sendai Japan

2. Department of Integrative Genomics Tohoku Medical Megabank Organization (ToMMo) Tohoku University Sendai Japan

3. Statistical Genetics Team, RIKEN Center for Advanced Intelligence Project Tokyo Japan

4. Department of Preventive Medicine and Epidemiology, ToMMo Tohoku University Sendai Japan

5. Department of Molecular Epidemiology Tohoku University School of Medicine Sendai Japan

Abstract

AbstractGenetic maps are fundamental resources for linkage and association studies. A fine‐scale genetic map can be constructed by inferring historical recombination events from the genome‐wide structure of linkage disequilibrium—a non‐random association of alleles among loci—by using population‐scale sequencing data. We constructed a fine‐scale genetic map and identified recombination hotspots from 10 092 551 bi‐allelic high‐quality autosomal markers segregating among 150 unrelated Japanese individuals whose genotypes were determined by high‐coverage (30×) whole‐genome sequencing, and the genotype quality was carefully controlled by using their parents' and offspring's genotypes. The pedigree information was also utilized for haplotype phasing. The resulting genome‐wide recombination rate profiles were concordant with those of the worldwide population on a broad scale, and the resolution was much improved. We identified 9487 recombination hotspots and confirmed the enrichment of previously known motifs in the hotspots. Moreover, we demonstrated that the Japanese genetic map improved the haplotype phasing and genotype imputation accuracy for the Japanese population. The construction of a population‐specific genetic map will help make genetics research more accurate.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Japan Science and Technology Agency

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology

Publisher

Wiley

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