A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Whole-genome view of the consequences of a population bottleneck using 2926 genome sequences from Finland and United Kingdom




AuthorsChheda H, Palta P, Pirinen M, McCarthy S, Walter K, Koskinen S, Salomaa V, Daly M, Durbin R, Palotie A, Aittokallio T, Ripatti S

PublisherNATURE PUBLISHING GROUP

Publication year2017

JournalEuropean Journal of Human Genetics

Journal name in sourceEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS

Journal acronymEUR J HUM GENET

Volume25

Issue4

First page 477

Last page484

Number of pages8

ISSN1018-4813

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1038/ejhg.2016.205


Abstract
Isolated populations with enrichment of variants due to recent population bottlenecks provide a powerful resource for identifying disease-associated genetic variants and genes. As a model of an isolate population, we sequenced the genomes of 1463 Finnish individuals as part of the Sequencing Initiative Suomi (SISu) Project. We compared the genomic profiles of the 1463 Finns to a sample of 1463 British individuals that were sequenced in parallel as part of the UK10K Project. Whereas there were no major differences in the allele frequency of common variants, a significant depletion of variants in the rare frequency spectrum was observed in Finns when comparing the two populations. On the other hand, we observed > 2.1 million variants that were twice as frequent among Finns compared with Britons and 800 000 variants that were more than 10 times more frequent in Finns. Furthermore, in Finns we observed a relative proportional enrichment of variants in the minor allele frequency range between 2 and 5% (P < 2.2x10(-16)). When stratified by their functional annotations, loss-of-function variants showed the highest proportional enrichment in Finns (P= 0.0291). In the non-coding part of the genome, variants in conserved regions (P= 0.002) and promoters (P= 0.01) were also significantly enriched in the Finnish samples. These functional categories represent the highest a priori power for downstream association studies of rare variants using population isolates.



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