High-throughput discovery of rare human nucleotide polymorphisms by Ecotilling

Bowers, Elisabeth

Abstract

Human individuals differ from one another at only similar to 0.1% of nucleotide positions, but these single nucleotide differences account for most heritable phenotypic variation. Large-scale efforts to discover and genotype human variation have been limited to common polymorphisms. However, these efforts overlook rare nucleotide changes that may contribute to phenotypic diversity and genetic disorders, including cancer. Thus, there is an increasing need for high-throughput methods to robustly detect rare nucleotide differences. Toward this end, we have adapted the mismatch discovery method known as Ecotilling for the discovery of human single nucleotide polymorphisms. To increase throughput and reduce costs, we developed a universal primer strategy and implemented algorithms for automated band detection. Ecotilling was validated by screening 90 human DNA samples for nucleotide changes in 5 gene targets and by comparing results to public resequencing data. To increase throughput for discovery of rare alleles, we pooled samples 8-fold and found Ecotilling to be efficient relative to resequencing, with a false negative rate of 5% and a false discovery rate of 4%. We identified 28 new rare alleles, including some that are predicted to damage protein function. The detection of rare damaging mutations has implications for models of human disease.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000240583100010 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volumen: 34
Número: 13
Editorial: OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Fecha de publicación: 2006
DOI:

10.1093/nar/gkl479

Notas: ISI