Author
Listed:
- Joshua D. Backman
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Alexander H. Li
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Anthony Marcketta
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Dylan Sun
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Joelle Mbatchou
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Michael D. Kessler
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Christian Benner
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Daren Liu
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Adam E. Locke
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Suganthi Balasubramanian
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Ashish Yadav
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Nilanjana Banerjee
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Christopher E. Gillies
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Amy Damask
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Simon Liu
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Xiaodong Bai
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Alicia Hawes
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Evan Maxwell
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Lauren Gurski
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Kyoko Watanabe
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Jack A. Kosmicki
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Veera Rajagopal
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Jason Mighty
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Marcus Jones
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Lyndon Mitnaul
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Eli Stahl
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Giovanni Coppola
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Eric Jorgenson
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Lukas Habegger
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- William J. Salerno
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Alan R. Shuldiner
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Luca A. Lotta
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- John D. Overton
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Michael N. Cantor
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Jeffrey G. Reid
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- George Yancopoulos
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Hyun M. Kang
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Jonathan Marchini
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Aris Baras
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Gonçalo R. Abecasis
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
- Manuel A. R. Ferreira
(Regeneron Genetics Center)
Abstract
A major goal in human genetics is to use natural variation to understand the phenotypic consequences of altering each protein-coding gene in the genome. Here we used exome sequencing1 to explore protein-altering variants and their consequences in 454,787 participants in the UK Biobank study2. We identified 12 million coding variants, including around 1 million loss-of-function and around 1.8 million deleterious missense variants. When these were tested for association with 3,994 health-related traits, we found 564 genes with trait associations at P ≤ 2.18 × 10−11. Rare variant associations were enriched in loci from genome-wide association studies (GWAS), but most (91%) were independent of common variant signals. We discovered several risk-increasing associations with traits related to liver disease, eye disease and cancer, among others, as well as risk-lowering associations for hypertension (SLC9A3R2), diabetes (MAP3K15, FAM234A) and asthma (SLC27A3). Six genes were associated with brain imaging phenotypes, including two involved in neural development (GBE1, PLD1). Of the signals available and powered for replication in an independent cohort, 81% were confirmed; furthermore, association signals were generally consistent across individuals of European, Asian and African ancestry. We illustrate the ability of exome sequencing to identify gene–trait associations, elucidate gene function and pinpoint effector genes that underlie GWAS signals at scale.
Suggested Citation
Joshua D. Backman & Alexander H. Li & Anthony Marcketta & Dylan Sun & Joelle Mbatchou & Michael D. Kessler & Christian Benner & Daren Liu & Adam E. Locke & Suganthi Balasubramanian & Ashish Yadav & Ni, 2021.
"Exome sequencing and analysis of 454,787 UK Biobank participants,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 599(7886), pages 628-634, November.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:599:y:2021:i:7886:d:10.1038_s41586-021-04103-z
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04103-z
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