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Sci Adv
Published

Incomplete annotation has a disproportionate impact on our understanding of Mendelian and complex neurogenetic disorders.

Authors

David Zhang, Sebastian Guelfi, Sonia Garcia-Ruiz, Beatrice Costa, Regina H Reynolds, Karishma D'Sa, Wenfei Liu, Thomas Courtin, Amy Peterson, Andrew E Jaffe, John Hardy, Juan A Botía, Leonardo Collado-Torres, Mina Ryten

Abstract

Growing evidence suggests that human gene annotation remains incomplete; however, it is unclear how this affects different tissues and our understanding of different disorders. Here, we detect previously unannotated transcription from Genotype-Tissue Expression RNA sequencing data across 41 human tissues. We connect this unannotated transcription to known genes, confirming that human gene annotation remains incomplete, even among well-studied genes including 63% of the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man-morbid catalog and 317 neurodegeneration-associated genes. We find the greatest abundance of unannotated transcription in brain and genes highly expressed in brain are more likely to be reannotated. We explore examples of reannotated disease genes, such as SNCA, for which we experimentally validate a previously unidentified, brain-specific, potentially protein-coding exon. We release all tissue-specific transcriptomes through vizER: http://rytenlab.com/browser/app/vizER We anticipate that this resource will facilitate more accurate genetic analysis, with the greatest impact on our understanding of Mendelian and complex neurogenetic disorders.

PMID:32917675 | DOI:10.1126/sciadv.aay8299

UK DRI Authors

John Hardy

Prof Sir John Hardy

Group Leader

Harnessing genetics to build a better understanding of dementia

Prof Sir John Hardy
Mina Ryten

Prof Mina Ryten

Centre Director

Leveraging brain transcriptomics to understand the pathophysiology of Lewy body diseases

Prof Mina Ryten