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Genetic complexity of killer-cell immunoglobulin-like receptor genes in human pangenome assemblies.

Tsung-Kai HungWan-Chi LiuSheng-Kai LaiHui-Wen ChuangYi-Che LeeHong-Ye LinChia-Lang HsuChien-Yu ChenYa-Chien YangJacob Shu-Jui HsuPei-Lung Chen
Published in: Genome research (2024)
The killer-cell immunoglobulin-like receptor (KIR) gene complex, a highly polymorphic region of the human genome that encodes proteins involved in immune responses, poses strong challenges in genotyping owing to its remarkable genetic diversity and structural intricacy. Accurate analysis of KIR alleles, including their structural variations, is crucial for understanding their roles in various immune responses. Leveraging the high-quality genome assemblies from the Human Pangenome Reference Consortium (HPRC), we present a novel bioinformatic tool, the structural KIR annoTator (SKIRT), to investigate gene diversity and facilitate precise KIR allele analysis. In 47 HPRC-phased assemblies, SKIRT identifies a recurrent novel KIR2DS4/3DL1 fusion gene in the paternal haplotype of HG02630 and maternal haplotype of NA19240. Additionally, SKIRT accurately identifies eight structural variants and 15 novel nonsynonymous alleles, all of which are independently validated using short-read data or quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Our study has discovered a total of 570 novel alleles, among which eight haplotypes harbor at least one KIR gene duplication, six haplotypes have lost at least one framework gene, and 75 out of 94 haplotypes (79.8%) carry at least five novel alleles, thus confirming KIR genetic diversity. These findings are pivotal in providing insights into KIR gene diversity and serve as a solid foundation for understanding the functional consequences of KIR structural variations. High-resolution genome assemblies offer unprecedented opportunities to explore polymorphic regions that are challenging to investigate using short-read sequencing methods. The SKIRT pipeline emerges as a highly efficient tool, enabling the comprehensive detection of the complete spectrum of KIR alleles within human genome assemblies.
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