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Dive into the research topics where Martin Pollard is active.

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Featured researches published by Martin Pollard.


Nature | 2004

The DNA sequence and biology of human chromosome 19

Jane Grimwood; Laurie Gordon; Anne S. Olsen; Astrid Terry; Jeremy Schmutz; Jane Lamerdin; Uffe Hellsten; David Goodstein; Olivier Couronne; Mary Tran-Gyamfi; Andrea Aerts; Michael R. Altherr; Linda Ashworth; Eva Bajorek; Stacey Black; Elbert Branscomb; Sean Caenepeel; Anthony Carrano; Yee Man Chan; Mari Christensen; Catherine A. Cleland; Alex Copeland; Eileen Dalin; Paramvir Dehal; Mirian Denys; John C. Detter; Julio Escobar; Dave Flowers; Dea Fotopulos; Carmen Garcia

Chromosome 19 has the highest gene density of all human chromosomes, more than double the genome-wide average. The large clustered gene families, corresponding high G + C content, CpG islands and density of repetitive DNA indicate a chromosome rich in biological and evolutionary significance. Here we describe 55.8 million base pairs of highly accurate finished sequence representing 99.9% of the euchromatin portion of the chromosome. Manual curation of gene loci reveals 1,461 protein-coding genes and 321 pseudogenes. Among these are genes directly implicated in mendelian disorders, including familial hypercholesterolaemia and insulin-resistant diabetes. Nearly one-quarter of these genes belong to tandemly arranged families, encompassing more than 25% of the chromosome. Comparative analyses show a fascinating picture of conservation and divergence, revealing large blocks of gene orthology with rodents, scattered regions with more recent gene family expansions and deletions, and segments of coding and non-coding conservation with the distant fish species Takifugu.


Nature | 2015

The African Genome Variation Project shapes medical genetics in Africa

Deepti Gurdasani; Tommy Carstensen; Fasil Tekola-Ayele; Luca Pagani; Ioanna Tachmazidou; Konstantinos Hatzikotoulas; Savita Karthikeyan; Louise Iles; Martin Pollard; Ananyo Choudhury; Graham R. S. Ritchie; Yali Xue; Jennifer L. Asimit; Rebecca N. Nsubuga; Elizabeth H. Young; Cristina Pomilla; Katja Kivinen; Kirk Rockett; Anatoli Kamali; Ayo Doumatey; Gershim Asiki; Janet Seeley; Fatoumatta Sisay-Joof; Muminatou Jallow; Stephen Tollman; Ephrem Mekonnen; Rosemary Ekong; Tamiru Oljira; Neil Bradman; Kalifa Bojang

Given the importance of Africa to studies of human origins and disease susceptibility, detailed characterization of African genetic diversity is needed. The African Genome Variation Project provides a resource with which to design, implement and interpret genomic studies in sub-Saharan Africa and worldwide. The African Genome Variation Project represents dense genotypes from 1,481 individuals and whole-genome sequences from 320 individuals across sub-Saharan Africa. Using this resource, we find novel evidence of complex, regionally distinct hunter-gatherer and Eurasian admixture across sub-Saharan Africa. We identify new loci under selection, including loci related to malaria susceptibility and hypertension. We show that modern imputation panels (sets of reference genotypes from which unobserved or missing genotypes in study sets can be inferred) can identify association signals at highly differentiated loci across populations in sub-Saharan Africa. Using whole-genome sequencing, we demonstrate further improvements in imputation accuracy, strengthening the case for large-scale sequencing efforts of diverse African haplotypes. Finally, we present an efficient genotype array design capturing common genetic variation in Africa.


Nature | 2004

The complete sequence of human chromosome 5

Jeremy Schmutz; Joel W. Martin; Astrid Terry; Olivier Couronne; Jane Grimwood; State Lowry; Laurie Gordon; Duncan Scott; Gary Xie; Wayne Huang; Uffe Hellsten; Mary Tran-Gyamfi; Xinwei She; Shyam Prabhakar; Andrea Aerts; Michael R. Altherr; Eva Bajorek; Stacey Black; Elbert Branscomb; Jean F. Challacombe; Yee Man Chan; Mirian Denys; Chris Detter; Julio Escobar; Dave Flowers; Dea Fotopulos; Tijana Glavina; Maria Gomez; Eidelyn Gonzales; David Goodstenin

Chromosome 5 is one of the largest human chromosomes and contains numerous intrachromosomal duplications, yet it has one of the lowest gene densities. This is partially explained by numerous gene-poor regions that display a remarkable degree of noncoding conservation with non-mammalian vertebrates, suggesting that they are functionally constrained. In total, we compiled 177.7 million base pairs of highly accurate finished sequence containing 923 manually curated protein-coding genes including the protocadherin and interleukin gene families. We also completely sequenced versions of the large chromosome-5-specific internal duplications. These duplications are very recent evolutionary events and probably have a mechanistic role in human physiological variation, as deletions in these regions are the cause of debilitating disorders including spinal muscular atrophy.


Nature Genetics | 2017

Exploring the genetic architecture of inflammatory bowel disease by whole-genome sequencing identifies association at ADCY7

Yang Luo; Katrina M de Lange; Luke Jostins; Loukas Moutsianas; Joshua C. Randall; Nicholas A. Kennedy; Christopher A. Lamb; Shane McCarthy; Tariq Ahmad; Cathryn Edwards; Eva Serra; Ailsa Hart; Christopher J. Hawkey; John C. Mansfield; Craig Mowat; William G. Newman; Sam Nichols; Martin Pollard; Jack Satsangi; Alison Simmons; Mark Tremelling; Holm H. Uhlig; David C. Wilson; James C. Lee; Natalie J. Prescott; Charlie W. Lees; Christopher G. Mathew; Miles Parkes; Jeffrey C. Barrett; Carl A. Anderson

To further resolve the genetic architecture of the inflammatory bowel diseases ulcerative colitis and Crohns disease, we sequenced the whole genomes of 4,280 patients at low coverage and compared them to 3,652 previously sequenced population controls across 73.5 million variants. We then imputed from these sequences into new and existing genome-wide association study cohorts and tested for association at ∼12 million variants in a total of 16,432 cases and 18,843 controls. We discovered a 0.6% frequency missense variant in ADCY7 that doubles the risk of ulcerative colitis. Despite good statistical power, we did not identify any other new low-frequency risk variants and found that such variants explained little heritability. We detected a burden of very rare, damaging missense variants in known Crohns disease risk genes, suggesting that more comprehensive sequencing studies will continue to improve understanding of the biology of complex diseases.


Current Biology | 2016

Deep Roots for Aboriginal Australian Y Chromosomes

Anders Bergström; Nano Nagle; Yuan Chen; Shane McCarthy; Martin Pollard; Qasim Ayub; Stephen Wilcox; Leah Wilcox; Roland A.H. van Oorschot; Peter McAllister; Lesley Williams; Yali Xue; R. John Mitchell; Chris Tyler-Smith

Summary Australia was one of the earliest regions outside Africa to be colonized by fully modern humans, with archaeological evidence for human presence by 47,000 years ago (47 kya) widely accepted [1, 2]. However, the extent of subsequent human entry before the European colonial age is less clear. The dingo reached Australia about 4 kya, indirectly implying human contact, which some have linked to changes in language and stone tool technology to suggest substantial cultural changes at the same time [3]. Genetic data of two kinds have been proposed to support gene flow from the Indian subcontinent to Australia at this time, as well: first, signs of South Asian admixture in Aboriginal Australian genomes have been reported on the basis of genome-wide SNP data [4]; and second, a Y chromosome lineage designated haplogroup C∗, present in both India and Australia, was estimated to have a most recent common ancestor around 5 kya and to have entered Australia from India [5]. Here, we sequence 13 Aboriginal Australian Y chromosomes to re-investigate their divergence times from Y chromosomes in other continents, including a comparison of Aboriginal Australian and South Asian haplogroup C chromosomes. We find divergence times dating back to ∼50 kya, thus excluding the Y chromosome as providing evidence for recent gene flow from India into Australia.


Nature Communications | 2016

A protein-truncating R179X variant in RNF186 confers protection against ulcerative colitis

Manuel A. Rivas; Daniel B. Graham; Patrick Sulem; Christine Stevens; A. Nicole Desch; Philippe Goyette; Daniel F. Gudbjartsson; Ingileif Jonsdottir; Unnur Thorsteinsdottir; Frauke Degenhardt; Sören Mucha; Mitja I. Kurki; Dalin Li; Mauro D'Amato; Vito Annese; Severine Vermeire; Rinse K. Weersma; Jonas Halfvarson; Paulina Paavola-Sakki; Maarit Lappalainen; Monkol Lek; Beryl B. Cummings; Taru Tukiainen; Talin Haritunians; Leena Halme; Lotta L. E. Koskinen; Ashwin N. Ananthakrishnan; Yang Luo; Graham A. Heap; Marijn C. Visschedijk

Protein-truncating variants protective against human disease provide in vivo validation of therapeutic targets. Here we used targeted sequencing to conduct a search for protein-truncating variants conferring protection against inflammatory bowel disease exploiting knowledge of common variants associated with the same disease. Through replication genotyping and imputation we found that a predicted protein-truncating variant (rs36095412, p.R179X, genotyped in 11,148 ulcerative colitis patients and 295,446 controls, MAF=up to 0.78%) in RNF186, a single-exon ring finger E3 ligase with strong colonic expression, protects against ulcerative colitis (overall P=6.89 × 10−7, odds ratio=0.30). We further demonstrate that the truncated protein exhibits reduced expression and altered subcellular localization, suggesting the protective mechanism may reside in the loss of an interaction or function via mislocalization and/or loss of an essential transmembrane domain.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2018

Long reads: their purpose and place

Martin Pollard; Deepti Gurdasani; Alex Mentzer; Tarryn Porter; Manjinder S. Sandhu

Abstract In recent years long-read technologies have moved from being a niche and specialist field to a point of relative maturity likely to feature frequently in the genomic landscape. Analogous to next generation sequencing, the cost of sequencing using long-read technologies has materially dropped whilst the instrument throughput continues to increase. Together these changes present the prospect of sequencing large numbers of individuals with the aim of fully characterizing genomes at high resolution. In this article, we will endeavour to present an introduction to long-read technologies showing: what long reads are; how they are distinct from short reads; why long reads are useful and how they are being used. We will highlight the recent developments in this field, and the applications and potential of these technologies in medical research, and clinical diagnostics and therapeutics.


Global Health, Epidemiology and Genomics | 2017

Whole-genome association study of antibody response to Epstein-Barr virus in an African population: a pilot.

N Sallah; Tommy Carstensen; Katie Wakeham; Rachel Bagni; Nazzarena Labo; Martin Pollard; Deepti Gurdasani; Kenneth Ekoru; Cristina Pomilla; Elizabeth H. Young; Segun Fatumo; Gershim Asiki; Anatoli Kamali; Manjinder S. Sandhu; Paul Kellam; Denise Whitby; Inês Barroso; Robert Newton

Epstein Barr virus (EBV) infects 95% of the global population and is associated with up to 2% of cancers globally. Immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibody levels to EBV have been shown to be heritable and associated with developing malignancies. We, therefore, performed a pilot genome-wide association analysis of anti-EBV IgG traits in an African population, using a combined approach including array genotyping, whole-genome sequencing and imputation to a panel with African sequence data. In 1562 Ugandans, we identify a variant in human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DQA1, rs9272371 (p = 2.6 × 10−17) associated with anti-EBV nuclear antigen-1 responses. Trans-ancestry meta-analysis and fine-mapping with European-ancestry individuals suggest the presence of distinct HLA class II variants driving associations in Uganda. In addition, we identify four putative, novel, very rare African-specific loci with preliminary evidence for association with anti-viral capsid antigen IgG responses which will require replication for validation. These findings reinforce the need for the expansion of such studies in African populations with relevant datasets to capture genetic diversity.


bioRxiv | 2018

Cohort-wide deep whole genome sequencing and the allelic architecture of complex traits

Arthur Gilly; Daniel Suveges; Karoline Kuchenbaecker; Martin Pollard; Loz Southam; Konstantinos Hatzikotoulas; Aliki-Eleni Farmaki; Thea Bjornland; Ryan Waples; Emil Vr Appel; Elisabetta Casalone; Giorgio Melloni; Britt Kilian; Nigel W. Rayner; Ioanna Ntalla; Kousik Kundu; Klaudia Walter; John Danesh; Adam S. Butterworth; Inês Barroso; Emmanouil Tsafantakis; George Dedoussis; Ida Moltke; Eleftheria Zeggini

The role of rare variants in complex traits remains uncharted. Here, we conduct deep whole genome sequencing of 1,457 individuals from an isolated population, and test for rare variant burdens across six cardiometabolic traits. We identify a role for rare regulatory variation, which has hitherto been missed. We find evidence of rare variant burdens overlapping with, and mostly independent of established common variant signals (ADIPOQ and adiponectin, P=4.2×10−8; APOC3 and triglyceride levels, P=1.58×10−26; GGT1 and gamma-glutamyltransferase, P=2.3×10−6; UGT1A9 and bilirubin, P=1.9×10−8), and identify replicating evidence for a burden associated with triglyceride levels in FAM189A (P=2.26×10−8), indicating a role for this gene in lipid metabolism.


bioRxiv | 2017

Very low depth whole genome sequencing in complex trait association studies

Arthur Gilly; Karoline Kuchenbaecker; Lorraine Southam; Daniel Suveges; Rachel Moore; Giorgio E. M. Melloni; Konstantinos Hatzikotoulas; Aliki-Eleni Farmaki; Graham R. S. Ritchie; Jeremy Schwartzentruber; Petr Danecek; Britt Kilian; Martin Pollard; Xiangyu Ge; Heather Elding; William Astle; Tao Jiang; Adam S. Butterworth; Nicole Soranzo; Emmanouil Tsafantakis; Maria Karaleftheri; George Dedoussis; Eleftheria Zeggini

Motivation Very low depth sequencing has been proposed as a cost-effective approach to capture low-frequency and rare variation in complex trait association studies. However, a full characterisation of the genotype quality and association power for very low depth sequencing designs is still lacking. Results We perform cohort-wide whole genome sequencing (WGS) at low depth in 1,239 individuals (990 at 1x depth and 249 at 4x depth) from an isolated population, and establish a robust pipeline for calling and imputing very low depth WGS genotypes from standard bioinformatics tools. Using genotyping chip, whole-exome sequencing (WES, 75x depth) and high-depth (22x) WGS data in the same samples, we examine in detail the sensitivity of this approach, and show that imputed 1x WGS recapitulates 95.2% of variants found by imputed GWAS with an average minor allele concordance of 97% for common and low-frequency variants. In our study, 1x further allowed the discovery of 140,844 true low-frequency variants with 73% genotype concordance when compared to high-depth WGS data. Finally, using association results for 57 quantitative traits, we show that very low depth WGS is an efficient alternative to imputed GWAS chip designs, allowing the discovery of up to twice as many true association signals than the classical imputed GWAS design. Supplementary Data Supplementary Data are appended to this manuscript.

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Deepti Gurdasani

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Arthur Gilly

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Britt Kilian

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Daniel Suveges

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Eleftheria Zeggini

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Graham R. S. Ritchie

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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