4.7 Article

Structural Architecture of SNP Effects on Complex Traits

期刊

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
卷 95, 期 5, 页码 477-489

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.09.009

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资金

  1. Conte Center for Computational Neuropsychiatric Genomics [NIH P50MH94267]
  2. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the NIH [KL2TR000431]
  3. [R01 MH090937]
  4. [U01 HG005773]
  5. [P60 DK20595]
  6. [U19 GM61393]
  7. [P50 HD055751]

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Despite the discovery of copy-number variation (CNV) across the genome nearly 10 years ago, current SNP-based analysis methodologies continue to collapse the homozygous (i.e., A/A), hemizygous (i.e., A/0), and duplicative (i.e., A/A/A) genotype states, treating the genotype variable as irreducible or unaltered by other colocalizing forms of genetic (e.g., structural) variation. Our understanding of common, genome-wide CNVs suggests that the canonical genotype construct might belie the enormous complexity of the genome. Here we present multiple analyses of several phenotypes and provide methods supporting a conceptual shift that embraces the structural dimension of genotype. We comprehensively investigate the impact of the structural dimension of genotype on (1) GWAS methods, (2) interpretation of rare LOF variants, (3) characterization of genomic architecture, and (4) implications for snapping loci involved in complex disease. Taken together, these results argue for the inclusion of a structural dimension and suggest that some portion of the missing heritability might be recovered through integration of the structural dimension of SNP effects on complex traits.

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