The Mutationathon highlights the importance of reaching standardization in estimates of pedigree-based germline mutation rates

Author:

Bergeron Lucie A1ORCID,Besenbacher Søren2ORCID,Turner Tychele3,Versoza Cyril J4,Wang Richard J5,Price Alivia Lee1,Armstrong Ellie6ORCID,Riera Meritxell7,Carlson Jedidiah8,Chen Hwei-yen1,Hahn Matthew W5ORCID,Harris Kelley8ORCID,Kleppe April Snøfrid2ORCID,López-Nandam Elora H9,Moorjani Priya10,Pfeifer Susanne P11ORCID,Tiley George P12ORCID,Yoder Anne D12,Zhang Guojie1,Schierup Mikkel H7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Section for Ecology and Evolution, Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen

2. Department of Molecular Medicine, Aarhus University

3. Department of Genetics, Washington University School of Medicine

4. Center for Evolution and Medicine, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University

5. Department of Biology and Department of Computer Science, Indiana University

6. Department of Biology, Stanford University

7. Bioinformatics Research Centre, Aarhus University

8. Department of Genome Sciences, University of Washington, Computational Biology Division, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

9. California Academy of Sciences

10. Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Center for Computational Biology, University of California, Berkeley

11. Center for Evolution and Medicine, Center for Mechanisms of Evolution, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University

12. Department of Biology, Duke University

Abstract

In the past decade, several studies have estimated the human per-generation germline mutation rate using large pedigrees. More recently, estimates for various nonhuman species have been published. However, methodological differences among studies in detecting germline mutations and estimating mutation rates make direct comparisons difficult. Here, we describe the many different steps involved in estimating pedigree-based mutation rates, including sampling, sequencing, mapping, variant calling, filtering, and appropriately accounting for false-positive and false-negative rates. For each step, we review the different methods and parameter choices that have been used in the recent literature. Additionally, we present the results from a ‘Mutationathon,’ a competition organized among five research labs to compare germline mutation rate estimates for a single pedigree of rhesus macaques. We report almost a twofold variation in the final estimated rate among groups using different post-alignment processing, calling, and filtering criteria, and provide details into the sources of variation across studies. Though the difference among estimates is not statistically significant, this discrepancy emphasizes the need for standardized methods in mutation rate estimations and the difficulty in comparing rates from different studies. Finally, this work aims to provide guidelines for computational and statistical benchmarks for future studies interested in identifying germline mutations from pedigrees.

Funder

Carlsbergfondet

National Science Foundation

Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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