Method

An extended set of yeast-based functional assays accurately identifies human disease mutations

    • 1 University of Toronto, Uppsala University;
    • 2 University of Toronto;
    • 3 Princeton University;
    • 4 Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Published March 14, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.192526.115
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cover of Genome Research Vol 36 Issue 5
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Abstract

We can now routinely identify coding variants within individual human genomes. A pressing challenge is to determine which variants disrupt the function of disease-associated genes. Both experimental and computational methods exist to predict pathogenicity of human genetic variation. However, a systematic performance comparison between them has been lacking. Therefore, we developed and exploited a panel of 26 yeast-based functional complementation assays to measure the impact of 179 variants (101 disease- and 78 non-disease-associated variants) from 22 human disease genes. Using the resulting reference standard, we show that experimental functional assays in a one-billion-year-diverged model organism can identify pathogenic alleles with significantly higher precision and specificity than current computational methods.

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