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Showing papers by "Susan K. Dutcher published in 2020"


Journal ArticleDOI
02 Jul 2020-Nature
TL;DR: A scalable pipeline is used to map and characterize structural variants in 17,795 deeply sequenced human genomes to create the largest, to the authors' knowledge, whole-genome-sequencing-based structural variant resource so far and infer the dosage sensitivity of genes and noncoding elements.
Abstract: A key goal of whole-genome sequencing for studies of human genetics is to interrogate all forms of variation, including single-nucleotide variants, small insertion or deletion (indel) variants and structural variants. However, tools and resources for the study of structural variants have lagged behind those for smaller variants. Here we used a scalable pipeline1 to map and characterize structural variants in 17,795 deeply sequenced human genomes. We publicly release site-frequency data to create the largest, to our knowledge, whole-genome-sequencing-based structural variant resource so far. On average, individuals carry 2.9 rare structural variants that alter coding regions; these variants affect the dosage or structure of 4.2 genes and account for 4.0-11.2% of rare high-impact coding alleles. Using a computational model, we estimate that structural variants account for 17.2% of rare alleles genome-wide, with predicted deleterious effects that are equivalent to loss-of-function coding alleles; approximately 90% of such structural variants are noncoding deletions (mean 19.1 per genome). We report 158,991 ultra-rare structural variants and show that 2% of individuals carry ultra-rare megabase-scale structural variants, nearly half of which are balanced or complex rearrangements. Finally, we infer the dosage sensitivity of genes and noncoding elements, and reveal trends that relate to element class and conservation. This work will help to guide the analysis and interpretation of structural variants in the era of whole-genome sequencing.

162 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A homozygous variant in CFAP57 that causes PCD is identified that is likely due to a defect in the inner dynein arm assembly process and is highly conserved in organisms that assemble motile cilia.
Abstract: Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is characterized by chronic airway disease, reduced fertility, and randomization of the left/right body axis. It is caused by defects of motile cilia and sperm flagella. We screened a cohort of affected individuals that lack an obvious axonemal defect for pathogenic variants using whole exome capture, next generation sequencing, and bioinformatic analysis assuming an autosomal recessive trait. We identified one subject with an apparently homozygous nonsense variant [(c.1762C>T), p.(Arg588*)] in the uncharacterized CFAP57 gene. Interestingly, the variant results in the skipping of exon 11 (58 amino acids), which may be due to disruption of an exonic splicing enhancer. In normal human nasal epithelial cells, CFAP57 localizes throughout the ciliary axoneme. Nasal cells from the PCD patient express a shorter, mutant version of CFAP57 and the protein is not incorporated into the axoneme. The missing 58 amino acids include portions of WD repeats that may be important for loading onto the intraflagellar transport (IFT) complexes for transport or docking onto the axoneme. A reduced beat frequency and an alteration in ciliary waveform was observed. Knockdown of CFAP57 in human tracheobronchial epithelial cells (hTECs) recapitulates these findings. Phylogenetic analysis showed that CFAP57 is highly conserved in organisms that assemble motile cilia. CFAP57 is allelic with the BOP2/IDA8/FAP57 gene identified previously in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Two independent, insertional fap57 Chlamydomonas mutant strains show reduced swimming velocity and altered waveforms. Tandem mass tag (TMT) mass spectroscopy shows that FAP57 is missing, and the "g" inner dyneins (DHC7 and DHC3) and the "d" inner dynein (DHC2) are reduced, but the FAP57 paralog FBB7 is increased. Together, our data identify a homozygous variant in CFAP57 that causes PCD that is likely due to a defect in the inner dynein arm assembly process.

31 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Because there is no consensus-based gold-standard diagnostic test for PCD, the ATS guidelines suggest screening patients for four clinical features that increase the likelihood of a diagnosis, particularly in a child.
Abstract: Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a genetic motor ciliopathy that is increasingly recognized as a cause of chronic upper and lower respiratory tract infections in children but is underdiagnosed in adults. Advances in the field have made validating the diagnosis of PCD both easier and more difficult. The task has been facilitated by guidelines issued by the American Thoracic Society (ATS) (1) and European Respiratory Society (2), and simplified by the commercial availability of gene panels for genetic testing. Because there is no consensus-based gold-standard diagnostic test for PCD, the ATS guidelines suggest screening patients for four clinical features that increase the likelihood of a diagnosis, particularly in a child:

6 citations