eLife (Sep 2017)

Genetic identification of a common collagen disease in Puerto Ricans via identity-by-descent mapping in a health system

  • Gillian Morven Belbin,
  • Jacqueline Odgis,
  • Elena P Sorokin,
  • Muh-Ching Yee,
  • Sumita Kohli,
  • Benjamin S Glicksberg,
  • Christopher R Gignoux,
  • Genevieve L Wojcik,
  • Tielman Van Vleck,
  • Janina M Jeff,
  • Michael Linderman,
  • Claudia Schurmann,
  • Douglas Ruderfer,
  • Xiaoqiang Cai,
  • Amanda Merkelson,
  • Anne E Justice,
  • Kristin L Young,
  • Misa Graff,
  • Kari E North,
  • Ulrike Peters,
  • Regina James,
  • Lucia Hindorff,
  • Ruth Kornreich,
  • Lisa Edelmann,
  • Omri Gottesman,
  • Eli EA Stahl,
  • Judy H Cho,
  • Ruth JF Loos,
  • Erwin P Bottinger,
  • Girish N Nadkarni,
  • Noura S Abul-Husn,
  • Eimear E Kenny

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.25060
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

Read online

Achieving confidence in the causality of a disease locus is a complex task that often requires supporting data from both statistical genetics and clinical genomics. Here we describe a combined approach to identify and characterize a genetic disorder that leverages distantly related patients in a health system and population-scale mapping. We utilize genomic data to uncover components of distant pedigrees, in the absence of recorded pedigree information, in the multi-ethnic BioMe biobank in New York City. By linking to medical records, we discover a locus associated with both elevated genetic relatedness and extreme short stature. We link the gene, COL27A1, with a little-known genetic disease, previously thought to be rare and recessive. We demonstrate that disease manifests in both heterozygotes and homozygotes, indicating a common collagen disorder impacting up to 2% of individuals of Puerto Rican ancestry, leading to a better understanding of the continuum of complex and Mendelian disease.

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