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BackgroundMost cases of congenital heart disease (CHD) are sporadic and nonsyndromic, with poorly understood etiology. Rare genetic variants have been found to affect the risk of sporadic, nonsyndromic CHD, but individual studies to date are of only moderate sizes, and none to date has incorporated the ohnolog status of candidate genes in the analysis. Ohnologs are genes retained from ancestral whole-genome duplications during evolution; multiple lines of evidence suggest ohnologs are overrepresented among dosage-sensitive genes. We integrated large-scale data on rare variants with evolutionary information on ohnolog status to identify novel genetic loci predisposing to CHD.MethodsWe compared copy number variants present in 4634 nonsyndromic CHD cases derived from publicly available data resources and the literature, and >27 000 healthy individuals. We analyzed deletions and duplications independently and identified copy number variant regions exclusive to cases. These data were integrated with whole-exome sequencing data from 829 sporadic, nonsyndromic patients with Tetralogy of Fallot. We placed our findings in an evolutionary context by comparing the proportion of vertebrate ohnologs in CHD cases and controls.ResultsNovel genetic loci in CHD cases were significantly enriched for ohnologs compared with the genome (χ2 test, P<0.0001, OR =1.253 [95% CI, 1.199-1.309]). We identified 54 novel candidate protein-coding genes supported by both: (1) copy number variant and whole-exome sequencing data; and (2) ohnolog status.ConclusionsWe have identified new CHD candidate loci, and show for the first time that ohnologs are overrepresented among CHD genes. Incorporation of evolutionary metrics may be useful in refining candidate genes emerging from large-scale genetic evaluations of CHD.

Original publication

DOI

10.1161/circgen.119.002694

Type

Journal

Circulation. Genomic and precision medicine

Publication Date

10/2019

Volume

12

Pages

442 - 451

Addresses

Division of Cardiovascular Sciences, School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine, and Health, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre (E.F., S.W., G.T., B.K.), University of Manchester.

Keywords

Humans, Heart Defects, Congenital, Gene Duplication, Information Storage and Retrieval, Databases, Genetic, Female, Male, Genetic Loci, DNA Copy Number Variations