Korean Genome Project: 1094 Korean personal genomes with clinical information

We present the initial phase of the Korean Genome Project (Korea1K), including 1094 whole genomes (sequenced at an average depth of 31×), along with data of 79 quantitative clinical traits. We identified 39 million single-nucleotide variants and indels of which half were singleton or doubleton and d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science advances 2020-05, Vol.6 (22), p.eaaz7835-eaaz7835
Hauptverfasser: Jeon, Sungwon, Bhak, Youngjune, Choi, Yeonsong, Jeon, Yeonsu, Kim, Seunghoon, Jang, Jaeyoung, Jang, Jinho, Blazyte, Asta, Kim, Changjae, Kim, Yeonkyung, Shim, Jungae, Kim, Nayeong, Kim, Yeo Jin, Park, Seung Gu, Kim, Jungeun, Cho, Yun Sung, Park, Yeshin, Kim, Hak-Min, Kim, Byoung-Chul, Park, Neung-Hwa, Shin, Eun-Seok, Kim, Byung Chul, Bolser, Dan, Manica, Andrea, Edwards, Jeremy S, Church, George, Lee, Semin, Bhak, Jong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We present the initial phase of the Korean Genome Project (Korea1K), including 1094 whole genomes (sequenced at an average depth of 31×), along with data of 79 quantitative clinical traits. We identified 39 million single-nucleotide variants and indels of which half were singleton or doubleton and detected Korean-specific patterns based on several types of genomic variations. A genome-wide association study illustrated the power of whole-genome sequences for analyzing clinical traits, identifying nine more significant candidate alleles than previously reported from the same linkage disequilibrium blocks. Also, Korea1K, as a reference, showed better imputation accuracy for Koreans than the 1KGP panel. As proof of utility, germline variants in cancer samples could be filtered out more effectively when the Korea1K variome was used as a panel of normals compared to non-Korean variome sets. Overall, this study shows that Korea1K can be a useful genotypic and phenotypic resource for clinical and ethnogenetic studies.
ISSN:2375-2548
2375-2548
DOI:10.1126/sciadv.aaz7835