Using whole-genome sequencing to characterize clinically significant blood groups among healthy older Australians

Author:

Jadhao Sudhir12,Davison Candice3ORCID,Roulis Eileen V.3ORCID,Lee Simon12,Lacaze Paul4ORCID,Riaz Moeen4,McNeil John J.4ORCID,Thomas David M.5ORCID,Pecheniuk Natalie M.1,Hyland Catherine A.3,Flower Robert L.3ORCID,Nagaraj Shivashankar H.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. 1Faculty of Health, Centre for Genomics and Personalised Health, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD, Australia;

2. 2Translational Research Institute, Brisbane, QLD, Australia;

3. 3Australian Red Cross Blood Service Lifeblood, Brisbane, QLD, Australia;

4. 4Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia; and

5. 5Garvan Institute of Medical Research, Sydney, NSW, Australia

Abstract

Abstract There have been no comprehensive studies of a full range of blood group polymorphisms within the Australian population. This problem is compounded by the absence of any databases carrying genomic information on chronically transfused patients and low frequency blood group antigens in Australia. Here, we use RBCeq, a web server–based blood group genotyping software, to identify unique blood group variants among Australians and compare the variation detected vs global data. Whole-genome sequencing data were analyzed for 2796 healthy older Australians from the Medical Genome Reference Bank and compared with data from 1000 Genomes phase 3 (1KGP3) databases comprising 661 African, 347 American, 503 European, 504 East Asian, and 489 South Asian participants. There were 661 rare variants detected in this Australian sample population, including 9 variants that had clinical associations. Notably, we identified 80 variants that were computationally predicted to be novel and deleterious. No clinically significant rare or novel variants were found associated with the genetically complex ABO blood group system. For the Rh blood group system, 2 novel and 15 rare variants were found. Our detailed blood group profiling results provide a starting point for the creation of an Australian blood group variant database.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Hematology

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