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      Specific phenotype semantics facilitate gene prioritization in clinical exome sequencing

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          Abstract

          Selection and prioritization of phenotype-centric variants remains a challenging part of variant analysis and interpretation in clinical exome sequencing. Phenotype-driven shortlisting of patient-specific gene lists can avoid missed diagnosis. Here, we analyzed the relevance of using primary Human Phenotype Ontology identifiers (HPO IDs) in prioritizing Mendelian disease genes across 30 in-house, 10 previously reported, and 10 recently published cases using three popular web-based gene prioritization tools (OMIMExplorer, VarElect & Phenolyzer). We assessed partial HPO-based gene prioritization using randomly chosen and top 10%, 30%, and 50% HPO IDs based on information content and found high variance within rank ratios across the former vs the latter. This signified that randomly selected less-specific HPO IDs for a given disease phenotype performed poorly by ranking probe gene farther away from the top rank. In contrast, the use of top 10%, 30%, and 50% HPO IDs individually could rank the probe gene among the top 1% in the ranked list of genes that was equivalent to the results when the full list of HPO IDs were used. Hence, we conclude that use of just the top 10% of HPO IDs chosen based on information content is sufficient for ranking the probe gene at top position. Our findings provide practical guidance for utilizing structured phenotype semantics and web-based gene-ranking tools to aid in identifying known as well unknown candidate gene associations in Mendelian disorders.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          +65 66013305 , paelaips@nus.edu.sg
          Journal
          Eur J Hum Genet
          Eur. J. Hum. Genet
          European Journal of Human Genetics
          Springer International Publishing (Cham )
          1018-4813
          1476-5438
          3 May 2019
          September 2019
          : 27
          : 9
          : 1389-1397
          Affiliations
          ISNI 0000 0001 2180 6431, GRID grid.4280.e, Department of Paediatrics, Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine, , National University of Singapore, National University Health System (NUHS), ; 1E Kent Ridge Road, 119228 Singapore
          Author information
          http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3352-2000
          Article
          PMC6777628 PMC6777628 6777628 412
          10.1038/s41431-019-0412-7
          6777628
          31053788
          d8ce914d-0733-4e05-a130-91c1dd830f40
          © European Society of Human Genetics 2019
          History
          : 16 May 2018
          : 21 February 2019
          : 15 April 2019
          Funding
          Funded by: FundRef https://doi.org/10.13039/501100001349, MOH | National Medical Research Council (NMRC);
          Award ID: NMRC/EDG/1056
          Award ID: NMRC/EDG/1056
          Award ID: NMRC/EDG/1056
          Award Recipient :
          Categories
          Article
          Custom metadata
          © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to European Society of Human Genetics 2019

          High-throughput screening,Genetic testing
          High-throughput screening, Genetic testing

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