Efficient Mining of Variants From Trios for Ventricular Septal Defect Association Study

Front Genet. 2019 Aug 8:10:670. doi: 10.3389/fgene.2019.00670. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

Ventricular septal defect (VSD) is a fatal congenital heart disease showing severe consequence in affected infants. Early diagnosis plays an important role, particularly through genetic variants. Existing panel-based approaches of variants mining suffer from shortage of large panels, costly sequencing, and missing rare variants. Although a trio-based method alleviates these limitations to some extent, it is agnostic to novel mutations and computational intensive. Considering these limitations, we are studying a novel variants mining algorithm from trio-based sequencing data and apply it on a VSD trio to identify associated mutations. Our approach starts with irrelevant k-mer filtering from sequences of a trio via a newly conceived coupled Bloom Filter, then corrects sequencing errors by using a statistical approach and extends kept k-mers into long sequences. These extended sequences are used as input for variants needed. Later, the obtained variants are comprehensively analyzed against existing databases to mine VSD-related mutations. Experiments show that our trio-based algorithm narrows down candidate coding genes and lncRNAs by about 10- and 5-folds comparing with single sequence-based approaches, respectively. Meanwhile, our algorithm is 10 times faster and 2 magnitudes memory-frugal compared with existing state-of-the-art approach. By applying our approach to a VSD trio, we fish out an unreported gene-CD80, a combination of two genes-MYBPC3 and TRDN and a lncRNA-NONHSAT096266.2, which are highly likely to be VSD-related.

Keywords: association study; k-mer filtering; long non-coding RNA; trio-sequencing; variant calling; ventricular septal defect.