Endophenotype effect sizes support variant pathogenicity in monogenic disease susceptibility genes.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-30-2022
Publication Title
Nat Commun
Volume
13
Issue
1
First Page
5106
Last Page
5106
Recommended Citation
Halford, J., Morrill, V., Choi, S., Jurgens, S., Melloni, G., Marston, N., Weng, L., Nauffal, V., Hall, A., Gunn, S., Austin-Tse, C., Pirruccello, J., Khurshid, S., Rehm, H., Benjamin, E., Boerwinkle, E., Brody, J., Correa, A., Fornwalt, B., Gupta, N., Haggerty, C., Harris, S., Heckbert, S., Hong, C., Kooperberg, C., Lin, H., Loos, R., Mitchell, B., Morrison, A., Post, W., Psaty, B., Redline, S., Rice, K., Rich, S., Rotter, J., Schnatz, P., Soliman, E., Sotoodehnia, N., Wong, E., Sabatine, M., Ruff, C., Lunetta, K., Ellinor, P., & Lubitz, S. (2022). Endophenotype effect sizes support variant pathogenicity in monogenic disease susceptibility genes.. Nat Commun, 13 (1), 5106-5106. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-32009-5