A Systematic Review of Extreme Phenotype Strategies to Search for Rare Variants in Genetic Studies of Complex Disorders
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Genetic epidemiology Genetic association studies Extreme phenotype Exome sequencing Tinnitus
Date
2020Referencia bibliográfica
Amanat S, Requena T, Lopez-Escamez JA. A Systematic Review of Extreme Phenotype Strategies to Search for Rare Variants in Genetic Studies of Complex Disorders. Genes. 2020; 11(9):987. [https://doi.org/10.3390/genes11090987]
Patrocinador
H2020 MSCA-ITN-2016-722046; La Caixa Foundation 100010434 LCF/PR/DE18/52010002Résumé
Exome sequencing has been commonly used to characterize rare diseases by selecting
multiplex families or singletons with an extreme phenotype (EP) and searching for rare variants
in coding regions. The EP strategy covers both extreme ends of a disease spectrum and it has
been also used to investigate the contribution of rare variants to the heritability of complex clinical
traits. We conducted a systematic review to find evidence supporting the use of EP strategies in
the search for rare variants in genetic studies of complex diseases and highlight the contribution of
rare variations to the genetic structure of polygenic conditions. After assessing the quality of the
retrieved records, we selected 19 genetic studies considering EPs to demonstrate genetic association.
All studies successfully identified several rare or de novo variants, and many novel candidate genes
were also identified by selecting an EP. There is enough evidence to support that the EP approach
for patients with an early onset of a disease can contribute to the identification of rare variants in
candidate genes or pathways involved in complex diseases. EP patients may contribute to a better
understanding of the underlying genetic architecture of common heterogeneous disorders such as
tinnitus or age-related hearing loss.