Guidelines for releasing a variant effect predictor

Computational methods for assessing the likely impacts of mutations, known as variant effect predictors (VEPs), are widely used in the assessment and interpretation of human genetic variation, as well as in other applications like protein engineering. Many different VEPs have been released to date,...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inArXiv
Main Authors Livesey, Benjamin J, Badonyi, Mihaly, Dias, Mafalda, Frazer, Jonathan, Kumar, Sushant, Lindorff-Larsen, Kresten, McCandlish, David M, Orenbuch, Rose, Shearer, Courtney A, Muffley, Lara, eman, Julia, Glazer, Andrew M, Lehner, Ben, Marks, Debora S, Roth, Frederick P, Rubin, Alan F, Starita, Lea M, Marsh, Joseph A
Format Paper
LanguageEnglish
Published 16.04.2024
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Computational methods for assessing the likely impacts of mutations, known as variant effect predictors (VEPs), are widely used in the assessment and interpretation of human genetic variation, as well as in other applications like protein engineering. Many different VEPs have been released to date, and there is tremendous variability in their underlying algorithms and outputs, and in the ways in which the methodologies and predictions are shared. This leads to considerable challenges for end users in knowing which VEPs to use and how to use them. Here, to address these issues, we provide guidelines and recommendations for the release of novel VEPs. Emphasising open-source availability, transparent methodologies, clear variant effect score interpretations, standardised scales, accessible predictions, and rigorous training data disclosure, we aim to improve the usability and interpretability of VEPs, and promote their integration into analysis and evaluation pipelines. We also provide a large, categorised list of currently available VEPs, aiming to facilitate the discovery and encourage the usage of novel methods within the scientific community.
Bibliography:SourceType-Other Sources-1
ObjectType-Article-2
content type line 53
ObjectType-Working Paper/Pre-Print-1
ISSN:2331-8422