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Construction and integration of three de novo Japanese human genome assemblies toward a population-specific reference

Jun Takayama, Shu Tadaka, Kenji Yano, Fumiki Katsuoka, Chinatsu Gocho, Takamitsu Funayama, Satoshi Makino, Yasunobu Okamura, Atsuo Kikuchi, Sachiyo Sugimoto, Junko Kawashima, Akihito Otsuki, Mika Sakurai‐Yageta, Jun Yasuda, Shigeo Kure, Kengo Kinoshita, Masayuki Yamamoto, Gen Tamiya

2021Nature Communications96 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The complete human genome sequence is used as a reference for next-generation sequencing analyses. However, some ethnic ancestries are under-represented in the reference genome (e.g., GRCh37) due to its bias toward European and African ancestries. Here, we perform de novo assembly of three Japanese male genomes using > 100× Pacific Biosciences long reads and Bionano Genomics optical maps per sample. We integrate the genomes using the major allele for consensus and anchor the scaffolds using genetic and radiation hybrid maps to reconstruct each chromosome. The resulting genome sequence, JG1, is contiguous, accurate, and carries the Japanese major allele at most loci. We adopt JG1 as the reference for confirmatory exome re-analyses of seven rare-disease Japanese families and find that re-analysis using JG1 reduces total candidate variant calls versus GRCh37 while retaining disease-causing variants. These results suggest that integrating multiple genomes from a single population can aid genome analyses of that population.

Topics & Concepts

GenomeReference genomeHuman genomeGenetics1000 Genomes ProjectGenomicsBiologyPopulationComputational biologyExomeExome sequencingGeneMutationMedicineGenotypeSingle-nucleotide polymorphismEnvironmental healthGenomics and Phylogenetic StudiesChromosomal and Genetic VariationsMolecular Biology Techniques and Applications