Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Thursday, July 21 2022 - 01:00
AsiaNet
First report from the world’s most ambitious sequencing project
REYKJAVIK, Iceland, July 20, 2022 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

Scientists at deCODE genetics a subsidiary of Amgen together with collaborators 
from Denmark report on the whole genome sequences of 150 thousand participants 
in the UK biobank in a paper published in the journal Nature today.

This is the first report from the largest whole genome sequencing effort to 
date where scientists from deCODE genetics and from the Wellcome Trust Sanger 
Institute are set to sequence 500 thousand whole genomes in three years.
The scientists at deCODE genetics found 600 millions SNPs and indels in these 
150 thousand genomes corresponding to 7% of those that can theoretically occur 
in the human genome. It is however likely that some of the theoretically 
possible variants are incompatible with life.

This large dataset allowed the scientists to separate regions that are tolerant 
to large diversity in sequence from those that are not. The assumption is that 
regions that are intolerant to sequence diversity are important to human 
survival and procreation. It has long been held that coding exons are the 
regions most important to human survival. However, when the 1% of the genome 
with sequences that are best conserved are examined only 13% of them are coding 
exons.

"Data of this type and quantity are going to revolutionize our ability to 
identify and characterize intergenic sequences of importance to human 
diversity, be it to risk of disease and response to treatment or some other 
attributes," said Kari Stefansson the founder of deCODE and one of the authors 
of the paper.

Furthermore, scientists at deCODE also report on the association of variants 
that were not identified through whole exome sequencing with diseases and other 
phenotypes.

Participants in the UK biobank are of diverse genetic ancestry and have 
forefathers from most of the countries of the world. The scientists determined 
that 85% of the participants could trace most of their ancestry to the British 
Isles. The scientists also found a large group of participants who can trace 
their ancestry mostly to Africa and South Asia. This study is likely to 
represent the largest set of whole genome sequenced individuals of African and 
South-Asian origin. However, the imbalance in the ethnic mix of those 
contributing sequences to this study as well as to other studies already 
published is unfortunate from both societal and scientific point of views. 
Scientists at deCODE genetics are determined to work towards more ethnically 
balanced sequencing cohorts in the future.

Data from this study are available to qualified researchers at the UK biobank 
research analysis platform. SNP and indel frequency data are available at 
decaf.decode.com allowing for identification of clinically important sequence 
variants.

Contact:
Thora Kristin Asgeirsdottir
thoraa@decode.is
+354 894 1909
deCODE genetics

Video: https://vimeo.com/727850884/4054e3345e

Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1862596/deCODE_genetics.jpg
Logo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1535464/deCODE_genetics_Amgen_Logo.jpg

Source: deCODE genetics
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