Author
Listed:
- David Porubsky
(University of Washington School of Medicine)
- Harriet Dashnow
(University of Utah
University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus)
- Thomas A. Sasani
(University of Utah)
- Glennis A. Logsdon
(University of Washington School of Medicine
University of Pennsylvania)
- Pille Hallast
(The Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine)
- Michelle D. Noyes
(University of Washington School of Medicine)
- Zev N. Kronenberg
(PacBio)
- Tom Mokveld
(PacBio)
- Nidhi Koundinya
(University of Washington School of Medicine)
- Cillian Nolan
(PacBio)
- Cody J. Steely
(University of Utah
University of Kentucky College of Medicine)
- Andrea Guarracino
(University of Tennessee Health Science Center)
- Egor Dolzhenko
(PacBio)
- William T. Harvey
(University of Washington School of Medicine)
- William J. Rowell
(PacBio)
- Kirill Grigorev
(NASA Ames Research Center
Blue Marble Space Institute of Science)
- Thomas J. Nicholas
(University of Utah)
- Michael E. Goldberg
(University of Utah)
- Keisuke K. Oshima
(University of Pennsylvania)
- Jiadong Lin
(University of Washington School of Medicine)
- Peter Ebert
(Heinrich Heine University
Heinrich Heine University)
- W. Scott Watkins
(University of Utah)
- Tiffany Y. Leung
(BC Cancer Agency)
- Vincent C. T. Hanlon
(BC Cancer Agency)
- Sean McGee
(University of Washington School of Medicine)
- Brent S. Pedersen
(University of Utah)
- Hannah C. Happ
(University of Utah)
- Hyeonsoo Jeong
(University of Washington School of Medicine
Altos Labs)
- Katherine M. Munson
(University of Washington School of Medicine)
- Kendra Hoekzema
(University of Washington School of Medicine)
- Daniel D. Chan
(BC Cancer Agency)
- Yanni Wang
(BC Cancer Agency)
- Jordan Knuth
(University of Washington School of Medicine)
- Gage H. Garcia
(University of Washington School of Medicine)
- Cairbre Fanslow
(PacBio)
- Christine Lambert
(PacBio)
- Charles Lee
(The Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine)
- Joshua D. Smith
(University of Washington School of Medicine)
- Shawn Levy
(Element Biosciences)
- Christopher E. Mason
(Weill Cornell Medicine
Weill Cornell Medicine
Weill Cornell Medicine)
- Erik Garrison
(University of Tennessee Health Science Center)
- Peter M. Lansdorp
(BC Cancer Agency
University of British Columbia)
- Deborah W. Neklason
(University of Utah)
- Lynn B. Jorde
(University of Utah)
- Aaron R. Quinlan
(University of Utah)
- Michael A. Eberle
(PacBio)
- Evan E. Eichler
(University of Washington School of Medicine
University of Washington)
Abstract
Understanding the human de novo mutation (DNM) rate requires complete sequence information1. Here using five complementary short-read and long-read sequencing technologies, we phased and assembled more than 95% of each diploid human genome in a four-generation, twenty-eight-member family (CEPH 1463). We estimate 98–206 DNMs per transmission, including 74.5 de novo single-nucleotide variants, 7.4 non-tandem repeat indels, 65.3 de novo indels or structural variants originating from tandem repeats, and 4.4 centromeric DNMs. Among male individuals, we find 12.4 de novo Y chromosome events per generation. Short tandem repeats and variable-number tandem repeats are the most mutable, with 32 loci exhibiting recurrent mutation through the generations. We accurately assemble 288 centromeres and six Y chromosomes across the generations and demonstrate that the DNM rate varies by an order of magnitude depending on repeat content, length and sequence identity. We show a strong paternal bias (75–81%) for all forms of germline DNM, yet we estimate that 16% of de novo single-nucleotide variants are postzygotic in origin with no paternal bias, including early germline mosaic mutations. We place all this variation in the context of a high-resolution recombination map (~3.4 kb breakpoint resolution) and find no correlation between meiotic crossover and de novo structural variants. These near-telomere-to-telomere familial genomes provide a truth set to understand the most fundamental processes underlying human genetic variation.
Suggested Citation
David Porubsky & Harriet Dashnow & Thomas A. Sasani & Glennis A. Logsdon & Pille Hallast & Michelle D. Noyes & Zev N. Kronenberg & Tom Mokveld & Nidhi Koundinya & Cillian Nolan & Cody J. Steely & Andr, 2025.
"Human de novo mutation rates from a four-generation pedigree reference,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 643(8071), pages 427-436, July.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:643:y:2025:i:8071:d:10.1038_s41586-025-08922-2
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-08922-2
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