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Differences in the number of de novo mutations between individuals are due to small family-specific effects and stochasticity

Authors :
Christian Gilissen
Jakob M. Goldmann
Raphael Bernier
Marianne A. Jonker
Joris A. Veltman
Martijn A. Huynen
Wendy S.W. Wong
Evan E. Eichler
Juliet E. Hampstead
George L. Maxwell
Amy B. Wilfert
Tychele N. Turner
Source :
Genome Research, 31, 1513-1518, Genome Research, 31, 9, pp. 1513-1518
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The number of de novo mutations (DNMs) in the human germline is correlated with parental age at conception, but this explains only part of the observed variation. We investigated whether there is a family-specific contribution to the number of DNMs in offspring. The analysis of DNMs in 111 dizygotic twin pairs did not identify a substantial family-specific contribution. This result was corroborated by comparing DNMs of 1669 siblings to those of age-matched unrelated offspring following correction for parental age. In addition, by modeling DNM data from 1714 multi-offspring families, we estimated that the family-specific contribution explains ∼5.2% of the variation in DNM number. Furthermore, we found no substantial difference between the observed number of DNMs and those predicted by a stochastic Poisson process. We conclude that there is a small family-specific contribution to DNM number and that stochasticity explains a large proportion of variation in DNM counts.

Details

ISSN :
10889051
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genome Research, 31, 1513-1518, Genome Research, 31, 9, pp. 1513-1518
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5aa1ae0f569cb3a606ab76eba462ceee