Abstract

BackgroundThe conventional variant calling of pathogenic alleles in exome and genome sequencing requires the presence of the non-pathogenic alleles as genome references. This hinders the correct identification of variants with minor and/or pathogenic reference alleles warranting additional approaches for variant calling.ResultsMore than 26,000 Exome Aggregation Consortium (ExAC) variants have a minor reference allele including variants with known ClinVar disease alleles. For instance, in a number of variants related to clotting disorders, the phenotype-associated allele is a human genome reference allele (rs6025, rs6003, rs1799983, and rs2227564 using the assembly hg19). We highlighted how the current variant calling standards miss homozygous reference disease variants in these sites and provided a bioinformatic panel that can be used to screen these variants using commonly available variant callers. We present exome sequencing results from an individual with venous thrombosis to emphasize how pathogenic alleles in clinically relevant variants escape variant calling while non-pathogenic alleles are detected.ConclusionsThis article highlights the importance of specialized variant calling strategies in clinical variants with minor reference alleles especially in the context of personal genomes and exomes. We provide here a simple strategy to screen potential disease-causing variants when present in homozygous reference state.

Highlights

  • The conventional variant calling of pathogenic alleles in exome and genome sequencing requires the presence of the non-pathogenic alleles as genome references

  • We studied the latest release of Exome Aggregation Consortium (ExAC) data as a more extensive source for coding variants [3] to find out the extent of minor reference alleles in the human genome and their implication on variant calling

  • Minor Reference Alleles Minor reference allele (MRA) variants were defined as variants where one of the alternate alleles is commoner than the reference

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Summary

Introduction

The conventional variant calling of pathogenic alleles in exome and genome sequencing requires the presence of the non-pathogenic alleles as genome references. This hinders the correct identification of variants with minor and/or pathogenic reference alleles warranting additional approaches for variant calling. One perplexing issue is how to choose the best reference for the species but for each variation site as well. The term “variations” implies differences between individuals and populations, the choice of a single reference is a practicality imposed by the need for a common ground for the analysis. Choosing the best possible combination of reference alleles to each and all variation sites in the

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