7 results on '"Barbitoff, Yury A."'
Search Results
2. Replication of Known and Identification of Novel Associations in Biobank-Scale Datasets: A Survey Using UK Biobank and FinnGen.
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Tkachenko, Alexander A., Changalidis, Anton I., Maksiutenko, Evgeniia M., Nasykhova, Yulia A., Barbitoff, Yury A., and Glotov, Andrey S.
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GENOME-wide association studies - Abstract
Over the last two decades, numerous genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have been performed to unveil the genetic architecture of human complex traits. Despite multiple efforts aimed at the trans-biobank integration of GWAS results, no systematic analysis of the variant-level properties affecting the replication of known associations (or identifying novel ones) in genome-wide meta-analysis has yet been performed using biobank-scale data. To address this issue, we performed a systematic comparison of GWAS summary statistics for 679 complex traits in the UK Biobank (UKB) and FinnGen (FG) cohorts. We identified 37,148 index variants with genome-wide associations with at least one trait in either cohort or in the meta-analysis, only 3528 (9.5%) of which were shared between UKB and FG. Nearly twice as many variants (6577) were replicated in another dataset at the significance level adjusted for the number of variants selected for replication. However, as many as 9230 loci failed to be replicated. Moreover, as many as 5813 loci were observed as significant associations only in meta-analysis results, highlighting the importance of trans-biobank meta-analysis efforts. We showed that variants that failed to replicate in UKB or FG tend to correspond to rare, less pleiotropic variants with lower effect sizes and lower LD score values. Genome-wide associations specific to meta-analysis were also enriched in low-effect variants; however, such variants tended to be more common and have more consistent frequencies between populations. Taken together, our results show a relatively high rate of non-replication of genome-wide associations in the studied cohorts and highlight both widely appreciated and less acknowledged properties of the associations affecting their identification and replication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Bioinformatics of germline variant discovery for rare disease diagnostics: current approaches and remaining challenges
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Barbitoff, Yury A, primary, Ushakov, Mikhail O, additional, Lazareva, Tatyana E, additional, Nasykhova, Yulia A, additional, Glotov, Andrey S, additional, and Predeus, Alexander V, additional
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- 2024
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4. Exome sequencing in extreme altitude mountaineers identifies pathogenic variants in RTEL1 and COL6A1 previously associated with respiratory failure.
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Maksiutenko, Evgeniia M., Merkureva, Valeriia, Barbitoff, Yury A., Tsay, Victoria V., Aseev, Mikhail V., Glotov, Andrey S., and Glotov, Oleg S.
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RESPIRATORY insufficiency ,ALTITUDES ,MOUNTAINEERING ,PULMONARY fibrosis ,MOUNTAINEERS - Abstract
Adaptation of humans to challenging environmental conditions, such as extreme temperature, malnutrition, or hypoxia, is an interesting phenomenon for both basic and applied research. Identification of the genetic factors contributing to human adaptation to these conditions enhances our understanding of the underlying molecular and physiological mechanisms. In our study, we analyzed the exomes of 22 high altitude mountaineers to uncover genetic variants contributing to hypoxic adaptation. To our surprise, we identified two putative loss‐of‐function variants, rs1385101139 in RTEL1 and rs1002726737 in COL6A1 in two extremely high altitude (personal record of more than 8500 m) professional climbers. Both variants can be interpreted as pathogenic according to medical geneticists' guidelines, and are linked to inherited conditions involving respiratory failure (late‐onset pulmonary fibrosis and severe Ullrich muscular dystrophy for rs1385101139 and rs1002726737, respectively). Our results suggest that a loss of gene function may act as an important factor of human adaptation, which is corroborated by previous reports in other human subjects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Altered Sphingolipid Hydrolase Activities and Alpha-Synuclein Level in Late-Onset Schizophrenia.
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Usenko, Tatiana, Bezrukova, Anastasia, Basharova, Katerina, Baydakova, Galina, Shagimardanova, Elena, Blatt, Nataliya, Rizvanov, Albert, Limankin, Oleg, Novitskiy, Maxim, Shnayder, Natalia, Izyumchenko, Artem, Nikolaev, Mikhail, Zabotina, Anna, Lavrinova, Anna, Kulabukhova, Darya, Nasyrova, Regina, Palchikova, Ekaterina, Zalutskaya, Natalia, Miliukhina, Irina, and Barbitoff, Yury
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ALPHA-synuclein ,LYSOSOMES ,PARKINSON'S disease ,ENZYME-linked immunosorbent assay ,LYSOSOMAL storage diseases ,SCHIZOPHRENIA - Abstract
Recent data described that patients with lysosomal storage disorders (LSDs) may have clinical schizophrenia (SCZ) features. Disruption of lipid metabolism in SCZ pathogenesis was found. Clinical features of schizophrenia (SCZ) have been demonstrated in patients with several lysosomal storage disorders (LSDs). Taking into account the critical role of lysosomal function for neuronal cells' lysosomal dysfunction could be proposed in SCZ pathogenesis. The current study analyzed lysosomal enzyme activities and the alpha-synuclein level in the blood of patients with late-onset SCZ. In total, 52 SCZ patients with late-onset SCZ, 180 sporadic Parkinson's disease (sPD) patients, and 176 controls were recruited. The enzymatic activity of enzymes associated with mucopolysaccharidosis (alpha-L-Iduronidase (IDUA)), glycogenosis (acid alpha-glucosidase (GAA)) and sphingolipidosis (galactosylceramidase (GALC), glucocerebrosidase (GCase), alpha-galactosidase (GLA), acid sphingomyelinase (ASMase)) and concentration of lysosphingolipids (hexosylsphingosine (HexSph), globotriaosylsphingosine (LysoGb3), and lysosphingomyelin (LysoSM)) were measured using LC-MS/MS. The alpha-synuclein level was estimated in magnetically separated CD45+ blood cells using the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Additionally, NGS analysis of 11 LSDs genes was conducted in 21 early-onset SCZ patients and 23 controls using the gene panel PGRNseq-NDD. Decreased ASMase, increased GLA activities, and increased HexSpn, LysoGb3, and LysoSM concentrations along with an accumulation of the alpha-synuclein level were observed in late-onset SCZ patients in comparison to the controls (p < 0.05). Four rare deleterious variants among LSDs genes causing mucopolysaccharidosis type I (IDUA (rs532731688, rs74385837) and type III (HGSNAT (rs766835582)) and sphingolipidosis (metachromatic leukodystrophy (ARSA (rs201251634)) were identified in five patients from the group of early-onset SCZ patients but not in the controls. Our findings supported the role of sphingolipid metabolism in SCZ pathogenesis. Aberrant enzyme activities and compounds of sphingolipids associated with ceramide metabolism may lead to accumulation of alpha-synuclein and may be critical in SCZ pathogenesis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. bioGWAS: A Simple and Flexible Tool for Simulating GWAS Datasets.
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Changalidis, Anton I., Alexeev, Dmitry A., Nasykhova, Yulia A., Glotov, Andrey S., and Barbitoff, Yury A.
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GENOME-wide association studies ,GENETIC variation ,BIOINFORMATICS software - Abstract
Simple Summary: Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) are a powerful tool for the identification of genes affecting human traits. Still, the interpretation of GWAS results is complicated, and new tools are actively being developed. Due to the scarcity of available datasets, simulation of GWAS data with known genetic effects is important as it enables accurate evaluation of such tools. In this study, we developed a flexible tool, bioGWAS, that provides a set of important functionalities for simulating GWAS results. We demonstrate that bioGWAS can efficiently generate GWAS results with predefined causal genes and biological processes and is capable of recapitulating the results of published GWAS studies. We thus believe that bioGWAS is an excellent method for testing bioinformatics software for GWAS results processing, as well as for the generation of datasets for educational purposes. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have proven to be a powerful tool for the identification of genetic susceptibility loci affecting human complex traits. In addition to pinpointing individual genes involved in a particular trait, GWAS results can be used to discover relevant biological processes for these traits. The development of new tools for extracting such information from GWAS results requires large-scale datasets with known biological ground truth. Simulation of GWAS results is a powerful method that may provide such datasets and facilitate the development of new methods. In this work, we developed bioGWAS, a simple and flexible pipeline for the simulation of genotypes, phenotypes, and GWAS summary statistics. Unlike existing methods, bioGWAS can be used to generate GWAS results for simulated quantitative and binary traits with a predefined set of causal genetic variants and/or molecular pathways. We demonstrate that the proposed method can recapitulate complete GWAS datasets using a set of reported genome-wide associations. We also used our method to benchmark several tools for gene set enrichment analysis for GWAS data. Taken together, our results suggest that bioGWAS provides an important set of functionalities that would aid the development of new methods for downstream processing of GWAS results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Russian Regional Differences in Allele Frequencies of CFTR Gene Variants: Genetic Monitoring of Infertile Couples.
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Glotov, Andrey S., Chernykh, Vyacheslav B., Solovova, Olga A., Polyakov, Aleksander V., Donnikov, Maksim Yu., Kovalenko, Ludmila V., Barbitoff, Yury A., Nasykhova, Yulia A., Lazareva, Tatyana E., and Glotov, Oleg S.
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GENETIC variation ,GENE frequency ,REGIONAL differences ,SEMEN analysis ,MALE infertility - Abstract
A male factor, commonly associated with poor semen quality, is revealed in about 50% of infertile couples. CFTR gene (Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conduction Regulator) variants are one of the common genetic causes of azoospermia-related male infertility. Notably, the spectrum and frequency of pathogenic CFTR variants vary between populations and geographical regions. In this work, we made an attempt to evaluate the allele frequency (AF) of 12 common CFTR variants in infertile Russian men and healthy individuals from different districts of Russia. Because of the limited number of population-based studies on Russian individuals, we characterized the population AFs based on data from the Registry of Russian cystic fibrosis (CF) patients. In addition to the CF patient registry, we estimated the local frequencies of the same set of variants based on the results of genotyping of CF patients in local biocollections (from St. Petersburg and Yugra regions). AFs of common CFTR variants calculated based on registry and biocollection data showed good concordance with directly measured population AFs. The estimated region-specific frequencies of CFTR variants allowed us to uncover statistically significant regional differences in the frequencies of the F508del (c.1521_1523del; p.Phe508del) and CFTRdele2,3(21kb) (c.54-5940_273+10250del21kb; p.Ser18ArgfsX) variants. The data from population-based studies confirmed previous observations that F508del, CFTRdele2,3(21kb), and L138ins (c.413_415dup; p.Leu138dup)variants are the most abundant among infertile patients, and their frequencies are significantly lower in healthy individuals and should be taken into account during genetic monitoring of the reproductive health of Russian individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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