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The UK10K project identifies rare variants in health and disease

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St Pourcain,  Beate
University of Bristol, Bristol, UK;
Population genetics of human communication, MPI for Psycholinguistics, Max Planck Society;

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nature14962.pdf
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Citation

The UK10K Consortium (2015). The UK10K project identifies rare variants in health and disease. Nature, 526(7571), 82-89. doi:10.1038/nature14962.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-0028-6551-0
Abstract
The contribution of rare and low-frequency variants to human traits is largely unexplored. Here we describe insights from sequencing whole genomes (low read depth, 7×) or exomes (high read depth, 80×) of nearly 10,000 individuals from population-based and disease collections. In extensively phenotyped cohorts we characterize over 24 million novel sequence variants, generate a highly accurate imputation reference panel and identify novel alleles associated with levels of triglycerides (APOB), adiponectin (ADIPOQ) and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDLR and RGAG1) from single-marker and rare variant aggregation tests. We describe population structure and functional annotation of rare and low-frequency variants, use the data to estimate the benefits of sequencing for association studies, and summarize lessons from disease-specific collections. Finally, we make available an extensive resource, including individual-level genetic and phenotypic data and web-based tools to facilitate the exploration of association results.