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The landscape of genomic structural variation in Indigenous Australians

Author

Listed:
  • Andre L. M. Reis

    (Garvan Institute of Medical Research
    Centre for Population Genomics, Garvan Institute of Medical Research and Murdoch Children’s Research Institute
    University of New South Wales)

  • Melissa Rapadas

    (Garvan Institute of Medical Research
    Centre for Population Genomics, Garvan Institute of Medical Research and Murdoch Children’s Research Institute)

  • Jillian M. Hammond

    (Garvan Institute of Medical Research
    Centre for Population Genomics, Garvan Institute of Medical Research and Murdoch Children’s Research Institute)

  • Hasindu Gamaarachchi

    (Garvan Institute of Medical Research
    Centre for Population Genomics, Garvan Institute of Medical Research and Murdoch Children’s Research Institute
    University of New South Wales)

  • Igor Stevanovski

    (Garvan Institute of Medical Research
    Centre for Population Genomics, Garvan Institute of Medical Research and Murdoch Children’s Research Institute)

  • Meutia Ayuputeri Kumaheri

    (Garvan Institute of Medical Research
    Centre for Population Genomics, Garvan Institute of Medical Research and Murdoch Children’s Research Institute)

  • Sanjog R. Chintalaphani

    (Garvan Institute of Medical Research
    Centre for Population Genomics, Garvan Institute of Medical Research and Murdoch Children’s Research Institute
    University of New South Wales)

  • Duminda S. B. Dissanayake

    (Australian National University
    University of Canberra)

  • Owen M. Siggs

    (Garvan Institute of Medical Research
    Centre for Population Genomics, Garvan Institute of Medical Research and Murdoch Children’s Research Institute
    Flinders University)

  • Alex W. Hewitt

    (University of Tasmania)

  • Bastien Llamas

    (Australian National University
    University of Adelaide
    University of Adelaide
    Telethon Kids Institute)

  • Alex Brown

    (Australian National University
    Telethon Kids Institute)

  • Gareth Baynam

    (University of Western Australia
    Western Australian Department of Health
    Western Australian Department of Health)

  • Graham J. Mann

    (Australian National University)

  • Brendan J. McMorran

    (Australian National University)

  • Simon Easteal

    (Australian National University)

  • Azure Hermes

    (Australian National University)

  • Misty R. Jenkins

    (The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research)

  • Hardip R. Patel

    (Australian National University)

  • Ira W. Deveson

    (Garvan Institute of Medical Research
    Centre for Population Genomics, Garvan Institute of Medical Research and Murdoch Children’s Research Institute
    University of New South Wales)

Abstract

Indigenous Australians harbour rich and unique genomic diversity. However, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander ancestries are historically under-represented in genomics research and almost completely missing from reference datasets1–3. Addressing this representation gap is critical, both to advance our understanding of global human genomic diversity and as a prerequisite for ensuring equitable outcomes in genomic medicine. Here we apply population-scale whole-genome long-read sequencing4 to profile genomic structural variation across four remote Indigenous communities. We uncover an abundance of large insertion–deletion variants (20–49 bp; n = 136,797), structural variants (50 b–50 kb; n = 159,912) and regions of variable copy number (>50 kb; n = 156). The majority of variants are composed of tandem repeat or interspersed mobile element sequences (up to 90%) and have not been previously annotated (up to 62%). A large fraction of structural variants appear to be exclusive to Indigenous Australians (12% lower-bound estimate) and most of these are found in only a single community, underscoring the need for broad and deep sampling to achieve a comprehensive catalogue of genomic structural variation across the Australian continent. Finally, we explore short tandem repeats throughout the genome to characterize allelic diversity at 50 known disease loci5, uncover hundreds of novel repeat expansion sites within protein-coding genes, and identify unique patterns of diversity and constraint among short tandem repeat sequences. Our study sheds new light on the dimensions and dynamics of genomic structural variation within and beyond Australia.

Suggested Citation

  • Andre L. M. Reis & Melissa Rapadas & Jillian M. Hammond & Hasindu Gamaarachchi & Igor Stevanovski & Meutia Ayuputeri Kumaheri & Sanjog R. Chintalaphani & Duminda S. B. Dissanayake & Owen M. Siggs & Al, 2023. "The landscape of genomic structural variation in Indigenous Australians," Nature, Nature, vol. 624(7992), pages 602-610, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:624:y:2023:i:7992:d:10.1038_s41586-023-06842-7
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06842-7
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