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A method to estimate the contribution of rare coding variants to complex trait heritability.


ABSTRACT: It has been postulated that rare coding variants (RVs; MAF < 0.01) contribute to the "missing" heritability of complex traits. We developed a framework, the Rare variant heritability (RARity) estimator, to assess RV heritability (h2RV) without assuming a particular genetic architecture. We applied RARity to 31 complex traits in the UK Biobank (n = 167,348) and showed that gene-level RV aggregation suffers from 79% (95% CI: 68-93%) loss of h2RV. Using unaggregated variants, 27 traits had h2RV > 5%, with height having the highest h2RV at 21.9% (95% CI: 19.0-24.8%). The total heritability, including common and rare variants, recovered pedigree-based estimates for 11 traits. RARity can estimate gene-level h2RV, enabling the assessment of gene-level characteristics and revealing 11, previously unreported, gene-phenotype relationships. Finally, we demonstrated that in silico pathogenicity prediction (variant-level) and gene-level annotations do not generally enrich for RVs that over-contribute to complex trait variance, and thus, innovative methods are needed to predict RV functionality.

SUBMITTER: Pathan N 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10858280 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A method to estimate the contribution of rare coding variants to complex trait heritability.

Pathan Nazia N   Deng Wei Q WQ   Di Scipio Matteo M   Khan Mohammad M   Mao Shihong S   Morton Robert W RW   Lali Ricky R   Pigeyre Marie M   Chong Michael R MR   Paré Guillaume G  

Nature communications 20240209 1


It has been postulated that rare coding variants (RVs; MAF < 0.01) contribute to the "missing" heritability of complex traits. We developed a framework, the Rare variant heritability (RARity) estimator, to assess RV heritability (h<sup>2</sup><sub>RV</sub>) without assuming a particular genetic architecture. We applied RARity to 31 complex traits in the UK Biobank (n = 167,348) and showed that gene-level RV aggregation suffers from 79% (95% CI: 68-93%) loss of h<sup>2</sup><sub>RV</sub>. Using u  ...[more]

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