학술논문

An integrated map of genetic variation from 1,092 human genomes
Document Type
article
Source
Nature. 491(7422)
Subject
Genetics
Human Genome
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Underpinning research
Aetiology
Generic health relevance
Alleles
Binding Sites
Conserved Sequence
Evolution
Molecular
Genetic Variation
Genetics
Medical
Genetics
Population
Genome
Human
Genome-Wide Association Study
Genomics
Haplotypes
Humans
Nucleotide Motifs
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
Racial Groups
Sequence Deletion
Transcription Factors
Genomes Project Consortium
General Science & Technology
Language
Abstract
By characterizing the geographic and functional spectrum of human genetic variation, the 1000 Genomes Project aims to build a resource to help to understand the genetic contribution to disease. Here we describe the genomes of 1,092 individuals from 14 populations, constructed using a combination of low-coverage whole-genome and exome sequencing. By developing methods to integrate information across several algorithms and diverse data sources, we provide a validated haplotype map of 38 million single nucleotide polymorphisms, 1.4 million short insertions and deletions, and more than 14,000 larger deletions. We show that individuals from different populations carry different profiles of rare and common variants, and that low-frequency variants show substantial geographic differentiation, which is further increased by the action of purifying selection. We show that evolutionary conservation and coding consequence are key determinants of the strength of purifying selection, that rare-variant load varies substantially across biological pathways, and that each individual contains hundreds of rare non-coding variants at conserved sites, such as motif-disrupting changes in transcription-factor-binding sites. This resource, which captures up to 98% of accessible single nucleotide polymorphisms at a frequency of 1% in related populations, enables analysis of common and low-frequency variants in individuals from diverse, including admixed, populations.