Articles in 2015

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  • Plant genomes are the index that will allow plant breeders and researchers to access the information contained in the world's seed banks, with each allele linking germplasm, genotype and phenotype. The journal endorses the international DivSeek initiative and will work with authors to ensure access to phenotype data linked to published genetic data.

    Editorial
  • Large copy number variants (CNVs) are strongly associated with morphogenetic processes and common neurodevelopmental disorders. A new study uses the example of Williams-Beuren syndrome (WBS) and Williams-Beuren region duplication syndrome to illustrate how induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) and next-generation genomics can lead to a better understanding of complex genetics.

    • Alexander Eckehart Urban
    • Carolin Purmann
    News & Views
  • Andrew Foote and colleagues report the whole-genome sequences and de novo assemblies of three marine mammal species—the walrus, killer whale and manatee—and an improved bottlenose dolphin genome. Their comparative genomic analysis finds evidence of parallel evolution across the marine mammal genomes.

    • Andrew D Foote
    • Yue Liu
    • Richard A Gibbs
    LetterOpen Access
  • Steven McCarroll and colleagues report an analysis of multiallelic copy number variants (mCNVs). They characterize mCNVs in 849 whole-genome sequences from the 1000 Genomes Project and find that mCNVs give rise to most gene dosage variation in humans.

    • Robert E Handsaker
    • Vanessa Van Doren
    • Steven A McCarroll
    Technical Report
  • Dominic Kwiatkowski and colleagues report a large multicenter genome-wide association study of Plasmodium falciparum resistance to artemisinin. They identify markers of a genetic background on which kelch13 mutations conferring artemisinin resistance are likely to emerge.

    • Olivo Miotto
    • Roberto Amato
    • Dominic P Kwiatkowski
    Article
  • Thierry Wirth, Philip Supply, Stefan Niemann and colleagues analyze 4,987 Mycobacterium tuberculosis strains of the Beijing lineage isolated from 99 countries. They report whole-genome sequencing of 110 representative strains, characterize global population structure and reconstruct the evolutionary history of this lineage.

    • Matthias Merker
    • Camille Blin
    • Thierry Wirth
    Article
  • Arul Chinnaiyan and colleagues report the curation of 7,256 RNA sequencing libraries from tumors, normal tissues and cell lines. They find 58,648 lncRNAs, of which 79% are previously unnannotated.

    • Matthew K Iyer
    • Yashar S Niknafs
    • Arul M Chinnaiyan
    Analysis
  • Adam Siepel and colleagues develop a statistical method, fitCons, which combines comparative and functional genomic data to estimate the probability that a point mutation will influence fitness. They generate fitCons scores for three human cell types from ENCODE data sets and demonstrate improved prediction power for cis regulatory elements in comparison to conventional conservation-based scores.

    • Brad Gulko
    • Melissa J Hubisz
    • Adam Siepel
    Technical Report
  • Rudolf Fehrmann, Lude Franke and colleagues report a method for capturing the variation present within mammalian transcriptomes in a limited number of 'transcriptional components' and demonstrate widespread correlation between gene copy number and expression levels. The method allows for the inference of candidate gene function and the identification of potential therapeutic targets in cancer.

    • Rudolf S N Fehrmann
    • Juha M Karjalainen
    • Lude Franke
    Analysis
  • Akiko Shimamura and colleagues report the identification of dominant-negative germline variants in ETV6 that cause thrombocytopenia and hematologic malignancies in the affected members of three families. All three mutations alter conserved amino acids in the transcriptional repressor encoded by ETV6 and affect its DNA binding.

    • Michael Y Zhang
    • Jane E Churpek
    • Akiko Shimamura
    Letter
  • Georgia Chenevix-Trench and colleagues report meta-analyses of genome-wide association studies identifying six loci newly associated with epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). They also test variants at the 12 known and 6 new EOC susceptibility loci for association in BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutation carriers.

    • Karoline B Kuchenbaecker
    • Susan J Ramus
    • Georgia Chenevix-Trench
    Letter
  • Ding Ma, Hui Wang, Xun Xu and colleagues report a genome-wide map of HPV integration sites in cervical cancer samples and cell lines. In addition to discovering new integration hot spots, the authors identify microhomology-mediated DNA repair as a likely mechanism by which HPV integrates into the human genome.

    • Zheng Hu
    • Da Zhu
    • Ding Ma
    Letter
  • David Reich, Shamil Sunyaev and colleagues report an analysis of the per-genome accumulation of nonsynonymous substitutions across diverse pairs of human populations. They find no evidence for a higher load of deleterious mutations in non-Africans than in West Africans and show that the observed patterns are not likely to reflect changes in natural selection.

    • Ron Do
    • Daniel Balick
    • David Reich
    Analysis
  • Nancy Jenkins and colleagues report the use of Sleeping Beauty transposon mutagenesis screens in mice to identify new genes involved in tumor progression in colorectal cancer. They identify 111 common transposon insertion sites present in all cohorts, including Znf292, a new tumor suppressor whose human counterpart is also mutated in human colorectal cancer.

    • Haruna Takeda
    • Zhubo Wei
    • Nancy A Jenkins
    Article
  • John Rioux, Andre Franke, Tom Karlsen and colleagues perform a fine-mapping study of the HLA region in Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. They identify a primary role for HLA-DRB1*01:03 in both diseases and find evidence of heterozygous advantage in protection against ulcerative colitis.

    • Philippe Goyette
    • Gabrielle Boucher
    • John D Rioux
    Letter