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Towards a reference genome that captures global genetic diversity.

Karen H Y WongWalfred MaChun-Yu WeiErh-Chan YehWan-Jia LinElin H F WangJen-Ping SuFeng-Jen HsiehHsiao-Jung KaoHsiao-Huei ChenStephen K ChowEleanor YoungCatherine ChuAnnie PoonChi-Fan YangDar-Shong LinYu Feng HuJer-Yuarn WuNi-Chung LeeWuh-Liang HwuDario BoffelliDavid MartinMing XiaoPui-Yan Kwok
Published in: Nature communications (2020)
The current human reference genome is predominantly derived from a single individual and it does not adequately reflect human genetic diversity. Here, we analyze 338 high-quality human assemblies of genetically divergent human populations to identify missing sequences in the human reference genome with breakpoint resolution. We identify 127,727 recurrent non-reference unique insertions spanning 18,048,877 bp, some of which disrupt exons and known regulatory elements. To improve genome annotations, we linearly integrate these sequences into the chromosomal assemblies and construct a Human Diversity Reference. Leveraging this reference, an average of 402,573 previously unmapped reads can be recovered for a given genome sequenced to ~40X coverage. Transcriptomic diversity among these non-reference sequences can also be directly assessed. We successfully map tens of thousands of previously discarded RNA-Seq reads to this reference and identify transcription evidence in 4781 gene loci, underlining the importance of these non-reference sequences in functional genomics. Our extensive datasets are important advances toward a comprehensive reference representation of global human genetic diversity.
Keyphrases
  • gene expression
  • genetic diversity
  • endothelial cells
  • dna methylation
  • rna seq
  • induced pluripotent stem cells
  • pluripotent stem cells
  • single cell
  • copy number
  • affordable care act
  • african american