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Quantifying the contribution of recessive coding variation to developmental disorders

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posted on 2025-07-31, 23:28 authored by G Gallone, M Bruntraeger, JF McRae, E Prigmore, P Short, M Niemi, J Kaplanis, EJ Radford, N Akawi, M Balasubramanian, J Dean, R Horton, A Hulbert, DS Johnson, K Johnson, D Kumar, SA Lynch, SG Mehta, J Morton, MJ Parker, M Splitt, PD Turnpenny, PC Vasudevan, M Wright, A Bassett, SS Gerety, CF Wright, DR FitzPatrick, HV Firth, ME Hurles, JC Barrett
We estimated the genome-wide contribution of recessive coding variation in 6040 families from the Deciphering Developmental Disorders study. The proportion of cases attributable to recessive coding variants was 3.6% in patients of European ancestry, compared with 50% explained by de novo coding mutations. It was higher (31%) in patients with Pakistani ancestry, owing to elevated autozygosity. Half of this recessive burden is attributable to known genes. We identified two genes not previously associated with recessive developmental disorders, KDM5B and EIF3F, and functionally validated them with mouse and cellular models. Our results suggest that recessive coding variants account for a small fraction of currently undiagnosed nonconsanguineous individuals, and that the role of noncoding variants, incomplete penetrance, and polygenic mechanisms need further exploration.

Funding

HICF-1009-003

Health Innovation Challenge Fund

National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)

St John’s College, Cambridge

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© 2017 The Authors, some rights reserved.

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from AAAS via the DOI in this record

Journal

Science

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2019-01-30T16:02:50Z

FOA date

2019-01-30T16:06:32Z

Citation

Vol. 362, pp. 1161 - 1164

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