Variant ranking pipeline for complex familial disorders

Author:

Ralli Sneha,Vira Tariq,Robles-Espinoza Carla Daniela,Adams David J.,Brooks-Wilson Angela R.

Abstract

AbstractIdentifying genetic susceptibility factors for complex disorders remains a challenging task. To analyze collections of small and large pedigrees where genetic heterogeneity is likely, but biological commonalities are plausible, we have developed a weights-based pipeline to prioritize variants and genes. The Weights-based vAriant Ranking in Pedigrees (WARP) pipeline prioritizes variants using 5 weights: disease incidence rate, number of cases in a family, genome fraction shared amongst cases in a family, allele frequency and variant deleteriousness. Weights, except for the population allele frequency weight, are normalized between 0 and 1. Weights are combined multiplicatively to produce family-specific-variant weights that are then averaged across all families in which the variant is observed to generate a multifamily weight. Sorting multifamily weights in descending order creates a ranked list of variants and genes for further investigation. WARP was validated using familial melanoma sequence data from the European Genome-phenome Archive. The pipeline identified variation in known germline melanoma genes POT1, MITF and BAP1 in 4 out of 13 families (31%). Analysis of the other 9 families identified several interesting genes, some of which might have a role in melanoma. WARP provides an approach to identify disease predisposing genes in studies with small and large pedigrees.

Funder

Graduate Fellowships from Simon Fraser University

NSERC-CREATE bioinformatics training grant through Simon Fraser University and University of British Columbia

Melanoma Research Alliance Pilot Award

CONACyT

Programa de Apoyo a Proyectos de Investigación e Innovación Tecnológica

Academy of Medical Sciences

Newton Advanced Fellowship

Wellcome Sanger Institute International Fellowship

CR-UK

The MRC-Dermatlas Project

The Wellcome Trust

Canadian Institutes for Health Research

BC Cancer Foundation Research Sustainment Fund

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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