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Dive into the research topics where Bradley P. Coe is active.

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Featured researches published by Bradley P. Coe.


Nature | 2012

Sporadic autism exomes reveal a highly interconnected protein network of de novo mutations

Brian J. O’Roak; Laura Vives; Santhosh Girirajan; Emre Karakoc; Niklas Krumm; Bradley P. Coe; Roie Levy; Arthur Ko; Choli Lee; Joshua D. Smith; Emily H. Turner; Ian B. Stanaway; Benjamin Vernot; Maika Malig; Carl Baker; Beau Reilly; Joshua M. Akey; Elhanan Borenstein; Mark J. Rieder; Deborah A. Nickerson; Raphael Bernier; Jay Shendure; Evan E. Eichler

It is well established that autism spectrum disorders (ASD) have a strong genetic component; however, for at least 70% of cases, the underlying genetic cause is unknown. Under the hypothesis that de novo mutations underlie a substantial fraction of the risk for developing ASD in families with no previous history of ASD or related phenotypes—so-called sporadic or simplex families—we sequenced all coding regions of the genome (the exome) for parent–child trios exhibiting sporadic ASD, including 189 new trios and 20 that were previously reported. Additionally, we also sequenced the exomes of 50 unaffected siblings corresponding to these new (n = 31) and previously reported trios (n = 19), for a total of 677 individual exomes from 209 families. Here we show that de novo point mutations are overwhelmingly paternal in origin (4:1 bias) and positively correlated with paternal age, consistent with the modest increased risk for children of older fathers to develop ASD. Moreover, 39% (49 of 126) of the most severe or disruptive de novo mutations map to a highly interconnected β-catenin/chromatin remodelling protein network ranked significantly for autism candidate genes. In proband exomes, recurrent protein-altering mutations were observed in two genes: CHD8 and NTNG1. Mutation screening of six candidate genes in 1,703 ASD probands identified additional de novo, protein-altering mutations in GRIN2B, LAMC3 and SCN1A. Combined with copy number variant (CNV) data, these results indicate extreme locus heterogeneity but also provide a target for future discovery, diagnostics and therapeutics.


Nature Genetics | 2011

A copy number variation morbidity map of developmental delay

Gregory M. Cooper; Bradley P. Coe; Santhosh Girirajan; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Tiffany H. Vu; Carl Baker; Charles A. Williams; Heather J. Stalker; Rizwan Hamid; Vickie Hannig; Hoda Abdel-Hamid; Patricia I. Bader; Elizabeth McCracken; Dmitriy Niyazov; Kathleen A. Leppig; Heidi Thiese; Marybeth Hummel; Nora Alexander; Jerome L. Gorski; Jennifer Kussmann; Vandana Shashi; Krys Johnson; Catherine Rehder; Blake C. Ballif; Lisa G. Shaffer; Evan E. Eichler

To understand the genetic heterogeneity underlying developmental delay, we compared copy number variants (CNVs) in 15,767 children with intellectual disability and various congenital defects (cases) to CNVs in 8,329 unaffected adult controls. We estimate that ∼14.2% of disease in these children is caused by CNVs >400 kb. We observed a greater enrichment of CNVs in individuals with craniofacial anomalies and cardiovascular defects compared to those with epilepsy or autism. We identified 59 pathogenic CNVs, including 14 new or previously weakly supported candidates, refined the critical interval for several genomic disorders, such as the 17q21.31 microdeletion syndrome, and identified 940 candidate dosage-sensitive genes. We also developed methods to opportunistically discover small, disruptive CNVs within the large and growing diagnostic array datasets. This evolving CNV morbidity map, combined with exome and genome sequencing, will be critical for deciphering the genetic basis of developmental delay, intellectual disability and autism spectrum disorders.


Nature Reviews Genetics | 2011

Genome structural variation discovery and genotyping

Can Alkan; Bradley P. Coe; Evan E. Eichler

Comparisons of human genomes show that more base pairs are altered as a result of structural variation — including copy number variation — than as a result of point mutations. Here we review advances and challenges in the discovery and genotyping of structural variation. The recent application of massively parallel sequencing methods has complemented microarray-based methods and has led to an exponential increase in the discovery of smaller structural-variation events. Some global discovery biases remain, but the integration of experimental and computational approaches is proving fruitful for accurate characterization of the copy, content and structure of variable regions. We argue that the long-term goal should be routine, cost-effective and high quality de novo assembly of human genomes to comprehensively assess all classes of structural variation.


Nature Genetics | 2004

A tiling resolution DNA microarray with complete coverage of the human genome.

Adrian Ishkanian; Chad A. Malloff; Spencer Watson; Ronald J. deLeeuw; Bryan Chi; Bradley P. Coe; Antoine M. Snijders; Donna G. Albertson; Daniel Pinkel; Marco A. Marra; Victor Ling; Calum MacAulay; Wan L. Lam

We constructed a tiling resolution array consisting of 32,433 overlapping BAC clones covering the entire human genome. This increases our ability to identify genetic alterations and their boundaries throughout the genome in a single comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) experiment. At this tiling resolution, we identified minute DNA alterations not previously reported. These alterations include microamplifications and deletions containing oncogenes, tumor-suppressor genes and new genes that may be associated with multiple tumor types. Our findings show the need to move beyond conventional marker-based genome comparison approaches, that rely on inference of continuity between interval markers. Our submegabase resolution tiling set for array CGH (SMRT array) allows comprehensive assessment of genomic integrity and thereby the identification of new genes associated with disease.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2012

Phenotypic Heterogeneity of Genomic Disorders and Rare Copy-Number Variants

Santhosh Girirajan; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Bradley P. Coe; Sumit Parikh; Neil R. Friedman; Amy Goldstein; Robyn A. Filipink; Juliann S. McConnell; Brad Angle; Wendy S. Meschino; Marjan M. Nezarati; Alexander Asamoah; Kelly E. Jackson; Gordon C. Gowans; Judith Martin; Erin P. Carmany; David W. Stockton; Rhonda E. Schnur; Lynette S. Penney; Donna M. Martin; Salmo Raskin; Kathleen A. Leppig; Heidi Thiese; Rosemarie Smith; Erika Aberg; Dmitriy Niyazov; Luis F. Escobar; Dima El-Khechen; Kisha Johnson; Robert Roger Lebel

BACKGROUND Some copy-number variants are associated with genomic disorders with extreme phenotypic heterogeneity. The cause of this variation is unknown, which presents challenges in genetic diagnosis, counseling, and management. METHODS We analyzed the genomes of 2312 children known to carry a copy-number variant associated with intellectual disability and congenital abnormalities, using array comparative genomic hybridization. RESULTS Among the affected children, 10.1% carried a second large copy-number variant in addition to the primary genetic lesion. We identified seven genomic disorders, each defined by a specific copy-number variant, in which the affected children were more likely to carry multiple copy-number variants than were controls. We found that syndromic disorders could be distinguished from those with extreme phenotypic heterogeneity on the basis of the total number of copy-number variants and whether the variants are inherited or de novo. Children who carried two large copy-number variants of unknown clinical significance were eight times as likely to have developmental delay as were controls (odds ratio, 8.16; 95% confidence interval, 5.33 to 13.07; P=2.11×10(-38)). Among affected children, inherited copy-number variants tended to co-occur with a second-site large copy-number variant (Spearman correlation coefficient, 0.66; P<0.001). Boys were more likely than girls to have disorders of phenotypic heterogeneity (P<0.001), and mothers were more likely than fathers to transmit second-site copy-number variants to their offspring (P=0.02). CONCLUSIONS Multiple, large copy-number variants, including those of unknown pathogenic significance, compound to result in a severe clinical presentation, and secondary copy-number variants are preferentially transmitted from maternal carriers. (Funded by the Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative and the National Institutes of Health.).


Genome Research | 2012

Copy number variation detection and genotyping from exome sequence data

Niklas Krumm; Peter H. Sudmant; Arthur Ko; Brian J. O'Roak; Maika Malig; Bradley P. Coe; Aaron R. Quinlan; Deborah A. Nickerson; Evan E. Eichler

While exome sequencing is readily amenable to single-nucleotide variant discovery, the sparse and nonuniform nature of the exome capture reaction has hindered exome-based detection and characterization of genic copy number variation. We developed a novel method using singular value decomposition (SVD) normalization to discover rare genic copy number variants (CNVs) as well as genotype copy number polymorphic (CNP) loci with high sensitivity and specificity from exome sequencing data. We estimate the precision of our algorithm using 122 trios (366 exomes) and show that this method can be used to reliably predict (94% overall precision) both de novo and inherited rare CNVs involving three or more consecutive exons. We demonstrate that exome-based genotyping of CNPs strongly correlates with whole-genome data (median r(2) = 0.91), especially for loci with fewer than eight copies, and can estimate the absolute copy number of multi-allelic genes with high accuracy (78% call level). The resulting user-friendly computational pipeline, CoNIFER (copy number inference from exome reads), can reliably be used to discover disruptive genic CNVs missed by standard approaches and should have broad application in human genetic studies of disease.


Cell | 2014

Disruptive CHD8 mutations define a subtype of autism early in development.

Raphael Bernier; Christelle Golzio; Bo Xiong; Holly A.F. Stessman; Bradley P. Coe; Osnat Penn; Kali Witherspoon; Jennifer Gerdts; Carl Baker; Anneke T. Vulto-van Silfhout; Janneke H M Schuurs-Hoeijmakers; Marco Fichera; Paolo Bosco; Serafino Buono; Antonino Alberti; Pinella Failla; Hilde Peeters; Jean Steyaert; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Ludmila Francescatto; Mefford Hc; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Trygve E. Bakken; Brian J. O'Roak; Matthew Pawlus; Randall T. Moon; Jay Shendure; David G. Amaral; Ed Lein; Julia Rankin

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a heterogeneous disease in which efforts to define subtypes behaviorally have met with limited success. Hypothesizing that genetically based subtype identification may prove more productive, we resequenced the ASD-associated gene CHD8 in 3,730 children with developmental delay or ASD. We identified a total of 15 independent mutations; no truncating events were identified in 8,792 controls, including 2,289 unaffected siblings. In addition to a high likelihood of an ASD diagnosis among patients bearing CHD8 mutations, characteristics enriched in this group included macrocephaly, distinct faces, and gastrointestinal complaints. chd8 disruption in zebrafish recapitulates features of the human phenotype, including increased head size as a result of expansion of the forebrain/midbrain and impairment of gastrointestinal motility due to a reduction in postmitotic enteric neurons. Our findings indicate that CHD8 disruptions define a distinct ASD subtype and reveal unexpected comorbidities between brain development and enteric innervation.


Nature Genetics | 2014

Refining analyses of copy number variation identifies specific genes associated with developmental delay

Bradley P. Coe; Kali Witherspoon; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Bregje W.M. van Bon; Anneke T. Vulto-van Silfhout; Paolo Bosco; Kathryn Friend; Carl Baker; Serafino Buono; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Janneke H M Schuurs-Hoeijmakers; A Hoischen; Rolph Pfundt; Nik Krumm; Gemma L. Carvill; Deana Li; David G. Amaral; Natasha J Brown; Paul J. Lockhart; Ingrid E. Scheffer; Antonino Alberti; Marie Shaw; Rosa Pettinato; Raymond C. Tervo; Nicole de Leeuw; Margot R.F. Reijnders; Beth S. Torchia; Hilde Peeters; Elizabeth Thompson; Brian J. O'Roak

Copy number variants (CNVs) are associated with many neurocognitive disorders; however, these events are typically large, and the underlying causative genes are unclear. We created an expanded CNV morbidity map from 29,085 children with developmental delay in comparison to 19,584 healthy controls, identifying 70 significant CNVs. We resequenced 26 candidate genes in 4,716 additional cases with developmental delay or autism and 2,193 controls. An integrated analysis of CNV and single-nucleotide variant (SNV) data pinpointed 10 genes enriched for putative loss of function. Follow-up of a subset of affected individuals identified new clinical subtypes of pediatric disease and the genes responsible for disease-associated CNVs. These genetic changes include haploinsufficiency of SETBP1 associated with intellectual disability and loss of expressive language and truncations of ZMYND11 in individuals with autism, aggression and complex neuropsychiatric features. This combined CNV and SNV approach facilitates the rapid discovery of new syndromes and genes involved in neuropsychiatric disease despite extensive genetic heterogeneity.


PLOS Genetics | 2011

Relative Burden of Large CNVs on a Range of Neurodevelopmental Phenotypes

Santhosh Girirajan; Zoran Brkanac; Bradley P. Coe; Carl Baker; Laura Vives; Tiffany H. Vu; Neil Shafer; Raphael Bernier; Giovanni Battista Ferrero; Margherita Silengo; Stephen T. Warren; Carlos S. Moreno; Marco Fichera; Corrado Romano; Wendy H. Raskind; Evan E. Eichler

While numerous studies have implicated copy number variants (CNVs) in a range of neurological phenotypes, the impact relative to disease severity has been difficult to ascertain due to small sample sizes, lack of phenotypic details, and heterogeneity in platforms used for discovery. Using a customized microarray enriched for genomic hotspots, we assayed for large CNVs among 1,227 individuals with various neurological deficits including dyslexia (376), sporadic autism (350), and intellectual disability (ID) (501), as well as 337 controls. We show that the frequency of large CNVs (>1 Mbp) is significantly greater for ID–associated phenotypes compared to autism (p = 9.58×10−11, odds ratio = 4.59), dyslexia (p = 3.81×10−18, odds ratio = 14.45), or controls (p = 2.75×10−17, odds ratio = 13.71). There is a striking difference in the frequency of rare CNVs (>50 kbp) in autism (10%, p = 2.4×10−6, odds ratio = 6) or ID (16%, p = 3.55×10−12, odds ratio = 10) compared to dyslexia (2%) with essentially no difference in large CNV burden among dyslexia patients compared to controls. Rare CNVs were more likely to arise de novo (64%) in ID when compared to autism (40%) or dyslexia (0%). We observed a significantly increased large CNV burden in individuals with ID and multiple congenital anomalies (MCA) compared to ID alone (p = 0.001, odds ratio = 2.54). Our data suggest that large CNV burden positively correlates with the severity of childhood disability: ID with MCA being most severely affected and dyslexics being indistinguishable from controls. When autism without ID was considered separately, the increase in CNV burden was modest compared to controls (p = 0.07, odds ratio = 2.33).


Nature Genetics | 2015

Excess of rare, inherited truncating mutations in autism

Niklas Krumm; Tychele N. Turner; Carl Baker; Laura Vives; Kiana Mohajeri; Kali Witherspoon; Archana Raja; Bradley P. Coe; Holly A.F. Stessman; Zong Xiao He; Suzanne M. Leal; Raphael Bernier; Evan E. Eichler

To assess the relative impact of inherited and de novo variants on autism risk, we generated a comprehensive set of exonic single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) and copy number variants (CNVs) from 2,377 families with autism. We find that private, inherited truncating SNVs in conserved genes are enriched in probands (odds ratio = 1.14, P = 0.0002) in comparison to unaffected siblings, an effect involving significant maternal transmission bias to sons. We also observe a bias for inherited CNVs, specifically for small (<100 kb), maternally inherited events (P = 0.01) that are enriched in CHD8 target genes (P = 7.4 × 10−3). Using a logistic regression model, we show that private truncating SNVs and rare, inherited CNVs are statistically independent risk factors for autism, with odds ratios of 1.11 (P = 0.0002) and 1.23 (P = 0.01), respectively. This analysis identifies a second class of candidate genes (for example, RIMS1, CUL7 and LZTR1) where transmitted mutations may create a sensitized background but are unlikely to be completely penetrant.

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Wan L. Lam

University of British Columbia

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Stephen Lam

University of British Columbia

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Cathie Garnis

University of British Columbia

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John D. Minna

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Carl Baker

University of Washington

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Adi F. Gazdar

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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