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Whole Genome Sequencing in the Inner City Asthma Consortium (ICAC) Cohorts

We performed whole-genome sequencing on individuals from the Asthma Phenotypes in the Inner City (APIC) and Urban Environment and Childhood Asthma (URECA) study cohorts, which consist of children with asthma who live in low-income neighborhoods across 10 U.S. cities. APIC was a one-year, prospective, observational study of children ages 6-17 with asthma. URECA was a prospective, observational study featuring a birth cohort of children with a high risk of developing asthma based on family history. We performed whole-genome sequencing on 1,035 individuals (ages 5-17 yrs; 67% Black, 25% Hispanic; 66% with MD-diagnosed asthma; APIC=508, URECA=527). Sequence read processing, quality control, and variant calling were performed using the Genome Analysis Toolkit suite (GATK v4). Variant call sites were annotated according to the filters applied in our common variant (minor allele frequency ≥ 1%) association studies, based on predicted false positive rates, genotype quality and depth, and population-adjusted Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. Principal components of ancestry were calculated using high quality, linkage-disequilibrium-pruned single-nucleotide variants, accounting for subject relatedness, using PC-Air and PC-Relate.