Affiliation:
1. Division of Translational Brain Sciences Department of Neurology Duke University Medical Center Durham North Carolina USA
2. Center for Genomic and Computational Biology Duke University Medical Center Durham North Carolina USA
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundShort structural variants (SSVs), including insertions/deletions (indels), are common in the human genome and impact disease risk. The role of SSVs in late‐onset Alzheimer's disease (LOAD) has been understudied. In this study, we developed a bioinformatics pipeline of SSVs within LOAD–genome‐wide association study (GWAS) regions to prioritize regulatory SSVs based on the strength of their predicted effect on transcription factor (TF) binding sites.MethodsThe pipeline utilized publicly available functional genomics data sources including candidate cis‐regulatory elements (cCREs) from ENCODE and single‐nucleus (sn)RNA‐seq data from LOAD patient samples.ResultsWe catalogued 1581 SSVs in candidate cCREs in LOAD GWAS regions that disrupted 737 TF sites. That included SSVs that disrupted the binding of RUNX3, SPI1, and SMAD3, within the APOE‐TOMM40, SPI1, and MS4A6A LOAD regions.ConclusionsThe pipeline developed here prioritized non‐coding SSVs in cCREs and characterized their putative effects on TF binding. The approach integrates multiomics datasets for validation experiments using disease models.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Geriatrics and Gerontology,Neurology (clinical),Developmental Neuroscience,Health Policy,Epidemiology
Cited by
1 articles.
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