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Immunoseq: the identification of functionally relevant variants through targeted capture and sequencing of active regulatory regions in human immune cells

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Authors

Morin, A 
Kwan, T 
Ge, B 
Letourneau, L 
Ban, M 

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The observation that the genetic variants identified in genome-wide association studies (GWAS) frequently lie in non-coding regions of the genome that contain cis-regulatory elements suggests that altered gene expression underlies the development of many complex traits. In order to efficiently make a comprehensive assessment of the impact of non-coding genetic variation in immune related diseases we emulated the whole-exome sequencing paradigm and developed a custom capture panel for the known DNase I hypersensitive site (DHS) in immune cells - "Immunoseq".

RESULTS: We performed Immunoseq in 30 healthy individuals where we had existing transcriptome data from T cells. We identified a large number of novel non-coding variants in these samples. Relying on allele specific expression measurements, we also showed that our selected capture regions are enriched for functional variants that have an impact on differential allelic gene expression. The results from a replication set with 180 samples confirmed our observations.

CONCLUSIONS: We show that Immunoseq is a powerful approach to detect novel rare variants in regulatory regions. We also demonstrate that these novel variants have a potential functional role in immune cells.

Description

Keywords

rare variants, immune disease, gene expression, next-generation sequencing, capture

Journal Title

BMC Medical Genomics

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1755-8794
1755-8794

Volume Title

9

Publisher

BioMed Central
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (G1100125)
This work was supported by grants from the Canadian Institute of Health Research (CIHR), the UK Medical Research Council (G1100125), the Swedish Research Council (DO283001) and Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation (KAW). We also acknowledge the use of subjects from the Cambridge BioResource and the support of the Cambridge NIHR Biomedical Research Centre. AM was supported by the Fond de Recherche Santé Québec Doctoral training award. TP and CL holds a Canada Research Chair.