The Human Pangenome Project: a global resource to map genomic diversity

Ting Wang(James S. McDonnell Foundation), Lucinda Antonacci-Fulton(James S. McDonnell Foundation), Kerstin Howe(Wellcome Sanger Institute), Heather A. Lawson(Washington University in St. Louis), Julian Lucas(University of California, Santa Cruz), Adam M. Phillippy(National Human Genome Research Institute), Alice B. Popejoy(University of California, Davis), Mobin Asri(University of California, Santa Cruz), Caryn Carson(James S. McDonnell Foundation), Mark Chaisson(University of Southern California), Xian Chang(University of California, Santa Cruz), Robert Cook‐Deegan(Washington Center), Adam L. Felsenfeld(National Institutes of Health), Robert S. Fulton(James S. McDonnell Foundation), Erik Garrison(University of Tennessee Health Science Center), Nanibaa’ A. Garrison(University of California, Los Angeles), Tina A. Graves-Lindsay(James S. McDonnell Foundation), Hanlee P. Ji(Stanford University), Eimear E. Kenny(Genomic Health (United States)), Barbara A. Koenig(University of California, San Francisco), Daofeng Li(James S. McDonnell Foundation), Tobias Marschall(Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf), Joshua F. McMichael(James S. McDonnell Foundation), Adam M. Novak(University of California, Santa Cruz), Deepak Purushotham(James S. McDonnell Foundation), Valérie Schneider(National Center for Biotechnology Information), Baergen I. Schultz(National Institutes of Health), Michael W. Smith(National Institutes of Health), Heidi J. Sofia(National Institutes of Health), Tsachy Weissman(Stanford University), Paul Flicek(European Bioinformatics Institute), Heng Li(Harvard University), Karen H. Miga(University of California, Santa Cruz), Benedict Paten(University of California, Santa Cruz), Erich D. Jarvis(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Ira M. Hall(Yale University), Evan E. Eichler(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), David Haussler(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Nature
April 20, 2022
Cited by 562Open Access
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Abstract

The human reference genome is the most widely used resource in human genetics and is due for a major update. Its current structure is a linear composite of merged haplotypes from more than 20 people, with a single individual comprising most of the sequence. It contains biases and errors within a framework that does not represent global human genomic variation. A high-quality reference with global representation of common variants, including single-nucleotide variants, structural variants and functional elements, is needed. The Human Pangenome Reference Consortium aims to create a more sophisticated and complete human reference genome with a graph-based, telomere-to-telomere representation of global genomic diversity. Here we leverage innovations in technology, study design and global partnerships with the goal of constructing the highest-possible quality human pangenome reference. Our goal is to improve data representation and streamline analyses to enable routine assembly of complete diploid genomes. With attention to ethical frameworks, the human pangenome reference will contain a more accurate and diverse representation of global genomic variation, improve gene-disease association studies across populations, expand the scope of genomics research to the most repetitive and polymorphic regions of the genome, and serve as the ultimate genetic resource for future biomedical research and precision medicine.


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