Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Updating the Assembly: What's in a base? (Part 2)


How the GRC should address rare bases, as well as common bases that result in non-functional alleles (a.k.a. polymorphic pseudogenes), in the reference assembly is a substantially more complex task than dealing with erroneous bases. This is made even more so by the wide range of opinions held by assembly users, which include:
  • Most common allele
  • Ancestral allele
  • Coding allele
All views have merit, and the opinion held by any genome user is likely to be colored by their own research needs, which may include short read mapping, variation analysis and clinical testing, among others. Regardless of view, it is important to recognize that updating bases in isolation to meet any of these goals runs the risk of creating false haplotypes- those not observed in any individual. Thus, further analyses are needed to investigate the possible mechanisms by which such any changes can be made.


The GRC currently favors a model in which haplotypic integrity is retained within blocks of linkage disequilibrium (LD) as best possible, every base is found at an MAF >5% in some population (i.e. no universally rare alleles) and coding alleles are favored over non-coding alleles, so long as they too are not universally rare. However, additional analyses will be performed before any bases changes are made. Examples of genomic regions where the existing reference base is associated with disease (ASPN, PMID:15640800) or non-coding variants (CYP3A5, PMID:11279519) are presented below in Figures 1 and 2. In the former case, the reference base is the minor allele, while in the latter, it is the major allele. We invite you to consider examples such as these as you form your own views of what should be represented in the reference assembly. If you have questions or concerns about base updates for GRCh38, let us know!


Fig.1
Fig. 1. Zoomed-in graphical view of the ASPN gene in GRCh37. The assembly sequence is shown at top. The ASPN gene is shown in green, and alignments of the corresponding RefSeq transcripts are in grey. The thin red line in the alignments corresponds to a 3 nt indel (TCA). The reference insertion creates an additional aspartic acid in a run of aspartic acids (red box). The reference allele (D14) is a minor allele (MAF between 0.05 and 0.10 in various populations) and is associated with osteroarthritis susceptibility. Other clone based sequences exist that contain the more common, non-disease associated, allele.


Fig. 2

Fig. 2. Zoomed-in graphical view of the CYP3A5 gene in GRCh37. The assembly sequence is shown at top. The CYP3A5 gene is shown in green. The highlighted base in the GRCh37 reference assembly represents the major allele in many populations. This allele creates cryptic splice site that disrupts the reading frame of CYP3A5 and results in a non-coding transcript. However, in other populations, the coding allele is the major allele.

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