Exome-wide assessment of the functional impact and pathogenicity of multinucleotide mutations

  1. on behalf of the Deciphering Developmental Disorders study
  1. 1Wellcome Sanger Institute, Wellcome Genome Campus, Hinxton, CB10 1SA, United Kingdom;
  2. 2Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Radcliffe Department of Medicine, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX3 9DU, United Kingdom;
  3. 3Institute of Biomedical and Clinical Science, University of Exeter Medical School, Exeter, EX2 5DW, United Kingdom;
  4. 4MRC Human Genetics Unit, MRC IGMM, University of Edinburgh, Western General Hospital, Edinburgh EH4 2XU, United Kingdom;
  5. 5Department of Clinical Genetics, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, CB2 0QQ, United Kingdom
  • Corresponding author: meh{at}sanger.ac.uk
  • Abstract

    Approximately 2% of de novo single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) appear as part of clustered mutations that create multinucleotide variants (MNVs). MNVs are an important source of genomic variability as they are more likely to alter an encoded protein than a SNV, which has important implications in disease as well as evolution. Previous studies of MNVs have focused on their mutational origins and have not systematically evaluated their functional impact and contribution to disease. We identified 69,940 MNVs and 91 de novo MNVs in 6688 exome-sequenced parent–offspring trios from the Deciphering Developmental Disorders Study comprising families with severe developmental disorders. We replicated the previously described MNV mutational signatures associated with DNA polymerase zeta, an error-prone translesion polymerase, and the APOBEC family of DNA deaminases. We estimate the simultaneous MNV germline mutation rate to be 1.78 × 10−10 mutations per base pair per generation. We found that most MNVs within a single codon create a missense change that could not have been created by a SNV. MNV-induced missense changes were, on average, more physicochemically divergent, were more depleted in highly constrained genes (pLI ≥ 0.9), and were under stronger purifying selection compared with SNV-induced missense changes. We found that de novo MNVs were significantly enriched in genes previously associated with developmental disorders in affected children. This shows that MNVs can be more damaging than SNVs even when both induce missense changes, and are an important variant type to consider in relation to human disease.

    Footnotes

    • [Supplemental material is available for this article.]

    • Article published online before print. Article, supplemental material, and publication date are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.239756.118.

    • Freely available online through the Genome Research Open Access option.

    • Received May 22, 2018.
    • Accepted May 24, 2019.

    This article, published in Genome Research, is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution 4.0 International), as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

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