Burden of Mendelian disorders in a large Middle Eastern biobank
Author | Aamer, Waleed |
Author | Al-Maraghi, Aljazi |
Author | Syed, Najeeb |
Author | Gandhi, Geethanjali Devadoss |
Author | Aliyev, Elbay |
Author | Al-Kurbi, Alya A. |
Author | Al-Saei, Omayma |
Author | Kohailan, Muhammad |
Author | Krishnamoorthy, Navaneethakrishnan |
Author | Palaniswamy, Sasirekha |
Author | Al-Malki, Khulod |
Author | Abbasi, Saleha |
Author | Agrebi, Nourhen |
Author | Abbaszadeh, Fatemeh |
Author | Akil, Ammira S.Al Shabeeb |
Author | Badii, Ramin |
Author | Ben-Omran, Tawfeg |
Author | Lo, Bernice |
Author | Mokrab, Younes |
Author | Fakhro, Khalid A. |
Available date | 2024-10-03T11:38:49Z |
Publication Date | 2024-12 |
Publication Name | Genome Medicine |
Identifier | http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13073-024-01307-6 |
Abstract | Background: Genome sequencing of large biobanks from under-represented ancestries provides a valuable resource for the interrogation of Mendelian disease burden at world population level, complementing small-scale familial studies. Methods: Here, we interrogate 6045 whole genomes from Qatar—a Middle Eastern population with high consanguinity and understudied mutational burden—enrolled at the national Biobank and phenotyped for 58 clinically-relevant quantitative traits. We examine a curated set of 2648 Mendelian genes from 20 panels, annotating known and novel pathogenic variants and assessing their penetrance and impact on the measured traits. Results: We find that 62.5% of participants are carriers of at least 1 known pathogenic variant relating to recessive conditions, with homozygosity observed in 1 in 150 subjects (0.6%) for which Peninsular Arabs are particularly enriched versus other ancestries (5.8-fold). On average, 52.3 loss-of-function variants were found per genome, 6.5 of which affect a known Mendelian gene. Several variants annotated in ClinVar/HGMD as pathogenic appeared at intermediate frequencies in this cohort (1–3%), highlighting Arab founder effect, while others have exceedingly high frequencies (> 5%) prompting reconsideration as benign. Furthermore, cumulative gene burden analysis revealed 56 genes having gene carrier frequency > 1/50, including 5 ACMG Tier 3 panel genes which would be candidates for adding to newborn screening in the country. Additionally, leveraging 58 biobank traits, we systematically assess the impact of novel/rare variants on phenotypes and discover 39 candidate large-effect variants associating with extreme quantitative traits. Furthermore, through rare variant burden testing, we discover 13 genes with high mutational load, including 5 with impact on traits relevant to disease conditions, including metabolic disorder and type 2 diabetes, consistent with the high prevalence of these conditions in the region. Conclusions: This study on the first phase of the growing Qatar Genome Program cohort provides a comprehensive resource from a Middle Eastern population to understand the global mutational burden in Mendelian genes and their impact on traits in seemingly healthy individuals in high consanguinity settings. |
Sponsor | This study was, in part, financially supported by QGP, Qatar National Research Fund (QNRF award, QF-QBB-RES-PUB-003, NPRP10-1219-160035, NPRP10-0202-170320, and NPRP11S-0110-180250), as well as Sidra internal funds. |
Language | en |
Subject | Arab population Biobank Consanguinity Genome sequencing Mendelian disorders Middle East Pathogenic variants Qatar Rare genetic disease |
Type | Article |
Issue Number | 1 |
Volume Number | 16 |
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