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      A SPECTRAL APPROACH INTEGRATING FUNCTIONAL GENOMIC ANNOTATIONS FOR CODING AND NONCODING VARIANTS

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          Abstract

          Over the past few years, substantial effort has been put into the functional annotation of variation in human genome sequence. Such annotations can play a critical role in identifying putatively causal variants among the abundant natural variation that occurs at a locus of interest. The main challenges in using these various annotations include their large numbers, and their diversity. Here we develop an unsupervised approach to integrate these different annotations into one measure of functional importance ( Eigen), that, unlike most existing methods, is not based on any labeled training data. We show that the resulting meta-score has better discriminatory ability using disease associated and putatively benign variants from published studies (in both coding and noncoding regions) compared with the recently proposed CADD score. Across varied scenarios, the Eigen score performs generally better than any single individual annotation, representing a powerful single functional score that can be incorporated in fine-mapping studies.

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          Most cited references17

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          The impact of next-generation sequencing technology on genetics.

          If one accepts that the fundamental pursuit of genetics is to determine the genotypes that explain phenotypes, the meteoric increase of DNA sequence information applied toward that pursuit has nowhere to go but up. The recent introduction of instruments capable of producing millions of DNA sequence reads in a single run is rapidly changing the landscape of genetics, providing the ability to answer questions with heretofore unimaginable speed. These technologies will provide an inexpensive, genome-wide sequence readout as an endpoint to applications ranging from chromatin immunoprecipitation, mutation mapping and polymorphism discovery to noncoding RNA discovery. Here I survey next-generation sequencing technologies and consider how they can provide a more complete picture of how the genome shapes the organism.
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            De novo gene disruptions in children on the autistic spectrum.

            Exome sequencing of 343 families, each with a single child on the autism spectrum and at least one unaffected sibling, reveal de novo small indels and point substitutions, which come mostly from the paternal line in an age-dependent manner. We do not see significantly greater numbers of de novo missense mutations in affected versus unaffected children, but gene-disrupting mutations (nonsense, splice site, and frame shifts) are twice as frequent, 59 to 28. Based on this differential and the number of recurrent and total targets of gene disruption found in our and similar studies, we estimate between 350 and 400 autism susceptibility genes. Many of the disrupted genes in these studies are associated with the fragile X protein, FMRP, reinforcing links between autism and synaptic plasticity. We find FMRP-associated genes are under greater purifying selection than the remainder of genes and suggest they are especially dosage-sensitive targets of cognitive disorders. Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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              Is savage's independence axiom a universal rationality principle?

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                9216904
                2419
                Nat Genet
                Nat. Genet.
                Nature genetics
                1061-4036
                1546-1718
                3 December 2015
                04 January 2016
                February 2016
                04 July 2016
                : 48
                : 2
                : 214-220
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Biostatistics, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032
                [2 ]Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032
                [3 ]Seaver Autism Center for Research and Treatment, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029
                [4 ]Department of Psychiatry, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029
                [5 ]Department of Genetics and Genomic Sciences, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029
                [6 ]Department of Neuroscience, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029
                [7 ]The Mindich Child Health and Development Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY 10029
                Author notes
                Correspondence should be addressed to: I.I.-L. ( ii2135@ 123456columbia.edu )
                [8]

                Equal contribution

                Article
                NIHMS742074
                10.1038/ng.3477
                4731313
                26727659
                424ab14a-e326-4baa-8852-b15cad6f20da

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                Genetics
                Genetics

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