DisVar: an R library for identifying variants associated with diseases using large-scale personal genetic information

Author:

Chanasongkhram Khunanon1,Damkliang Kasikrit2,Sangket Unitsa13

Affiliation:

1. Division of Biological Science, Faculty of Science, Prince of Songkla University, Hat Yai, Songkhla, Thailand

2. Division of Computational Science, Faculty of Science, Prince of Songkla University, Hat Yai, Songkhla, Thailand

3. Center for Genomics and Bioinformatics Research, Faculty of Science, Prince of Songkla University, Hat Yai, Songkhla, Thailand

Abstract

Background Genetic variants may potentially play a contributing factor in the development of diseases. Several genetic disease databases are used in medical research and diagnosis but the web applications used to search these databases for disease-associated variants have limitations. The application may not be able to search for large-scale genetic variants, the results of searches may be difficult to interpret and variants mapped from the latest reference genome (GRCH38/hg38) may not be supported. Methods In this study, we developed a novel R library called “DisVar” to identify disease-associated genetic variants in large-scale individual genomic data. This R library is compatible with variants from the latest reference genome version. DisVar uses five databases of disease-associated variants. Over 100 million variants can be simultaneously searched for specific associated diseases. Results The package was evaluated using 24 Variant Call Format (VCF) files (215,054 to 11,346,899 sites) from the 1000 Genomes Project. Disease-associated variants were detected in 298,227 hits across all the VCF files, taking a total of 63.58 m to complete. The package was also tested on ClinVar’s VCF file (2,120,558 variants), where 20,657 hits associated with diseases were identified with an estimated elapsed time of 45.98 s. Conclusions DisVar can overcome the limitations of existing tools and is a fast and effective diagnostic and preventive tool that identifies disease-associated variations from large-scale genetic variants against the latest reference genome.

Funder

Graduate Fellowship, Faculty of Science, Prince of Songkla University

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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