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Intrinsic DNA topology as a prioritization metric in genomic fine-mapping studies
Author(s) -
Hannah C. Ainsworth,
Timothy D. Howard,
Carl D. Langefeld
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkaa877
Subject(s) - biology , computational biology , annotation , dna sequencing , metric (unit) , single nucleotide polymorphism , genomics , genetics , genome , computer science , topology (electrical circuits) , data mining , dna , mathematics , combinatorics , gene , operations management , genotype , economics
In genomic fine-mapping studies, some approaches leverage annotation data to prioritize likely functional polymorphisms. However, existing annotation resources can present challenges as many lack information for novel variants and/or may be uninformative for non-coding regions. We propose a novel annotation source, sequence-dependent DNA topology, as a prioritization metric for fine-mapping. DNA topology and function are well-intertwined, and as an intrinsic DNA property, it is readily applicable to any genomic region. Here, we constructed and applied Minor Groove Width (MGW) as a prioritization metric. Using an established MGW-prediction method, we generated a MGW census for 199 038 197 SNPs across the human genome. Summarizing a SNP's change in MGW (ΔMGW) as a Euclidean distance, ΔMGW exhibited a strongly right-skewed distribution, highlighting the infrequency of SNPs that generate dissimilar shape profiles. We hypothesized that phenotypically-associated SNPs can be prioritized by ΔMGW. We tested this hypothesis in 116 regions analyzed by a Massively Parallel Reporter Assay and observed enrichment of large ΔMGW for functional polymorphisms (P = 0.0007). To illustrate application in fine-mapping studies, we applied our MGW-prioritization approach to three non-coding regions associated with systemic lupus erythematosus. Together, this study presents the first usage of sequence-dependent DNA topology as a prioritization metric in genomic association studies.

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