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Oxford University Press, Genetics, 4(199), p. 1243-1254, 2015

DOI: 10.1534/genetics.114.173351

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An Estimate of the Average Number of Recessive Lethal Mutations Carried by Humans

Journal article published in 2015 by Ziyue Gao, Darrel Waggoner, Matthew Stephens, Carole Ober ORCID, Molly Przeworski
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

The effects of inbreeding on human health depend critically on the number and severity of recessive, deleterious mutations carried by individuals. In humans, existing estimates of these quantities are based on comparisons between consanguineous and non-consanguineous couples, an approach that confounds socioeconomic and genetic effects of inbreeding. To circumvent this limitation, we focused on a founder population with almost complete Mendelian disease ascertainment and a known pedigree. By considering all recessive lethal diseases reported in the pedigree and simulating allele transmissions, we estimated that each haploid set of human autosomes carries on average 0.29 (95% credible interval [0.10, 0.83]) autosomal, recessive alleles that lead to complete sterility or severe disorders at birth or before reproductive age when homozygous. Comparison to existing estimates of the deleterious effects of all recessive alleles suggests that a substantial fraction of the burden of autosomal, recessive variants is due to single mutations that lead to death between birth and reproductive age. In turn, the comparison to estimates from other eukaryotes points to a surprising constancy of the average number of recessive lethal mutations across organisms with markedly different genome sizes. ; Comment: 37 pages, 1 figure