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Extremely rare variants reveal patterns of germline mutation rate heterogeneity in humans.

Citation
Carlson, J., et al. “Extremely Rare Variants Reveal Patterns Of Germline Mutation Rate Heterogeneity In Humans.”. Nature Communications, p. 3753.
Center University of Michigan
Author Jedidiah Carlson, Adam E Locke, Matthew Flickinger, Matthew Zawistowski, Shawn Levy, Richard M Myers, Michael Boehnke, Hyun Min Kang, Laura J Scott, Jun Z Li, Sebastian Zöllner, BRIDGES Consortium
Abstract

A detailed understanding of the genome-wide variability of single-nucleotide germline mutation rates is essential to studying human genome evolution. Here, we use ~36 million singleton variants from 3560 whole-genome sequences to infer fine-scale patterns of mutation rate heterogeneity. Mutability is jointly affected by adjacent nucleotide context and diverse genomic features of the surrounding region, including histone modifications, replication timing, and recombination rate, sometimes suggesting specific mutagenic mechanisms. Remarkably, GC content, DNase hypersensitivity, CpG islands, and H3K36 trimethylation are associated with both increased and decreased mutation rates depending on nucleotide context. We validate these estimated effects in an independent dataset of ~46,000 de novo mutations, and confirm our estimates are more accurate than previously published results based on ancestrally older variants without considering genomic features. Our results thus provide the most refined portrait to date of the factors contributing to genome-wide variability of the human germline mutation rate.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Nature communications
Volume
9
Issue
1
Number of Pages
3753
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
2041-1723
DOI
10.1038/s41467-018-05936-5
Alternate Journal
Nat Commun
PMID
30218074
PMCID
PMC6138700
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