Research articles

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  • Kari Stefansson and colleagues identify a nonsense mutation in RBM12 segregating with psychosis in an extended Icelandic pedigree and an independent frameshift mutation in RBM12 segregating with psychosis in a Finnish family. They further show that carriers of the Icelandic mutation who are unaffected by psychosis exhibit a psychiatric disorder and cognitive test battery profile resembling that of patients with schizophrenia.

    • Stacy Steinberg
    • Steinunn Gudmundsdottir
    • Kari Stefansson
    Letter
  • Erwin Gelfand, Andrew Snow, Joshua Milner and colleagues identify heterozygous CARD11 mutations associated with severe atopic disease in eight individuals from four families. They further show that the mutant CARD11 proteins exhibit both loss-of-function and dominant-interfering activity and that the cellular defects in patient T cells can be partially rescued by supplementing with glutamine.

    • Chi A Ma
    • Jeffrey R Stinson
    • Joshua D Milner
    Article
  • Ian Alexander and colleagues characterize a liver-specific enhancer–promoter element that is found in the genome of wild-type adeno-associated virus type 2 (AAV2), from which gene transfer vectors have been derived. They suggest that these sequences could provide a possible link between AAV integration events in the liver and gene dysregulation and pathogenesis.

    • Grant J Logan
    • Allison P Dane
    • Ian E Alexander
    Letter
  • Ralph McGinnis, Valgerdur Steinthorsdottir, Linda Morgan and colleagues perform a genome-wide association study in the offspring of preeclampsia pregnancies and identify variants in the fetal genome near FLT1 that are associated with risk of preeclampsia. FLT1 is known to encode an isoform of placental origin implicated in the pathology of preeclampsia, providing biological support for the association of this locus with preeclampsia risk.

    • Ralph McGinnis
    • Valgerdur Steinthorsdottir
    • Linda Morgan
    Letter
  • Ingileif Jonsdottir, Björn Nilsson, Kari Stefansson and colleagues perform a genome-wide association study for immunoglobulin levels in Icelandic and Swedish cohorts. They find 38 new variants associated with IgA, IgG, IgM or composite immunoglobulin traits and identify candidate genes underlying the regulation of immunoglobulin levels.

    • Stefan Jonsson
    • Gardar Sveinbjornsson
    • Kari Stefansson
    Article
  • Danielle Posthuma and colleagues report a genome-wide association analysis for insomnia complaints in 113,006 individuals from the UK Biobank that identifies associations with variants near seven genes. They find evidence for sex-specific genetic architectures underlying genetic risk for insomnia and genetic correlations between insomnia complaints and psychiatric and metabolic traits.

    • Anke R Hammerschlag
    • Sven Stringer
    • Danielle Posthuma
    Article
  • Christopher Amos and colleagues perform genome-wide association analysis for lung cancer using cohorts genotyped on the OncoArray and combing these with existing data. They identify 18 loci, 10 of which are new, finding heterogeneity across the different lung cancer subtypes, and explore candidate genes through eQTL analysis in lung tissue.

    • James D McKay
    • Rayjean J Hung
    • Christopher I Amos
    Letter
  • Clare Turnbull and colleagues report discovery of 19 new susceptibility loci for testicular germ cell tumor (TGCT) and provide evidence for a network of physical interactions between TGCT risk variants and candidate causal genes. Their findings implicate widespread disruption of developmental transcriptional regulators in TGCT susceptibility, consistent with failed primordial germ cell differentiation as an initiating step in oncogenesis.

    • Kevin Litchfield
    • Max Levy
    • Clare Turnbull
    Letter
  • Paul Lehner and colleagues identify an essential role for MORC2 in HUSH complex–mediated epigenetic silencing. They show that loss of MORC2 causes chromatin decompaction at HUSH-target loci and that a MORC2 mutation that causes Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease results in hyperactivation of HUSH-mediated repression in neuronal cells.

    • Iva A Tchasovnikarova
    • Richard T Timms
    • Paul J Lehner
    Article
  • Salvatore Spicuglia and colleagues use a high-throughput reporter assay to identify a set of mammalian promoters, termed Epromoters, that display enhancer activity and have distinct genomic and epigenomic features. Through CRISPR–Cas9 gene editing experiments, they show that Epromoters are involved in long-range gene regulation in cis.

    • Lan T M Dao
    • Ariel O Galindo-Albarrán
    • Salvatore Spicuglia
    Article
  • Etienne Bucher and colleagues use a combination of short- and long-read sequencing, along with optical mapping technologies, to produce the high-quality de novo assembly of the apple genome. They identify a new repetitive retrotransposon sequence and analyze DNA methylation data in relation to important agronomic traits.

    • Nicolas Daccord
    • Jean-Marc Celton
    • Etienne Bucher
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Tianzhen Zhang, Xiongming Du and colleagues report whole-genome resequencing of 318 upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) accessions. They carried out genome-wide association analyses to identify loci associated with fiber quality, lint yield and resistance to Verticillium wilt, and identify two ethylene-pathway genes associated with the increased lint yield observed in improved cultivars.

    • Lei Fang
    • Qiong Wang
    • Tianzhen Zhang
    Article
  • Christina Curtis and colleagues simulate spatial tumor growth under different evolutionary models and compare their results to multiregion sequencing data. They find that it is possible to distinguish tumors driven by strong positive selection from those evolving neutrally or under weak selection and infer different evolutionary modes within and between tumor types.

    • Ruping Sun
    • Zheng Hu
    • Christina Curtis
    Article
  • Chiea Chuen Khor, Tin Aung, Francesca Pasutto, Janey Wiggs and colleagues report a global genome-wide association study of exfoliation syndrome and a fine-mapping analysis of a previously identified disease-associated locus, LOXL1. They identify a rare protective variant in LOXL1 exclusive to the Japanese population and five new common variant susceptibility loci.

    • Tin Aung
    • Mineo Ozaki
    • Chiea Chuen Khor
    Article
  • Nazneen Rahman, Geert Kops and colleagues report the identification of biallelic loss-of-function mutations in TRIP13 in six individuals with Wilms tumor who presented with features of mosaic variegated aneuploidy. They show that TRIP13-mutant cells show spindle assembly checkpoint defects and suggest that mechanisms leading to aneuploidy may contribute directly to increased cancer risk.

    • Shawn Yost
    • Bas de Wolf
    • Nazneen Rahman
    Letter
  • Yuta Kochi and colleagues perform expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) analysis on five subsets of immune cells individually sorted from blood from 105 individuals. They develop an integrated analysis pipeline of expression and epigenomic data along with gene association to identify cell-specific candidate causal genes and apply this to rheumatoid arthritis.

    • Kazuyoshi Ishigaki
    • Yuta Kochi
    • Kazuhiko Yamamoto
    Letter
  • By analyzing imputed genetic data for 42 human traits, Doug Speed and colleagues derive a model that describes how heritability varies with minor allele frequency, linkage disequilibrium and genotype certainty. Using this model, they show that common SNPs contribute substantially more heritability than previously thought.

    • Doug Speed
    • Na Cai
    • David J Balding
    Article
  • Sudipto Roy, Carol Wicking, Carsten Bergmann and colleagues report that mutations in DZIP1L cause autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD). Through studies of mouse and zebrafish models of DZIP1L loss of function, the authors demonstrate that DZIP1L is required for proper function of the periciliary diffusion barrier.

    • Hao Lu
    • Maria C Rondón Galeano
    • Carsten Bergmann
    Article