A new study has looked at just how genetically different we all are.

The powerful new analysis of the protein-coding region of the human genome (known as the ‘exome’) will boost efforts to pinpoint clinically relevant genetic variations linked to human disease.

It revealed patterns of genetic variation worldwide by sequencing the exomes of 60,706 individuals with diverse geographic ancestries, including European, African, South Asian, East Asian and Latino populations.

Using a massive exome sequencing database made available through the Exome Aggregation Consortium (ExAC), the international research team identified around 7.4 million genetic variants, providing unprecedented resolution into low-frequency protein-coding variants in human populations.

ExAC catalogues exome data from 60,706 unrelated individuals sequenced from numerous disease-specific and population genetic studies.

“Large-scale reference datasets of human genetic variation are critical for the medical and functional interpretation of DNA sequence changes,” says research leader University of Sydney’s Dr Monkol Lek.

“This analysis reveals global patterns of genetic variation providing resolution that hasn’t been possible with smaller datasets of genetic variation.”

In a sub-analysis of the new paper published in Nature, the authors analysed 192 pathogenic variants reported in other studies, finding only nine with sufficient data supporting a conclusion that these variants had a strong disease association.

Exome sequencing is used for sequencing a subset of the human DNA genome that encodes proteins, known as exons.

Humans have about 180,000 exons, constituting about 1 per cent of the human genome, or approximately 30 million base pairs.

Three-quarters of the known genetic disease-causing variants are located in the protein-coding exome. Given the cost and technical challenges in analysing the all genomic sequence data, researchers are focusing much of their research primarily on exome sequencing.

Interpreting findings is a significant challenge at the heart of genetic sequencing. Each exome contains about 13,500 single nucleotide variants that change the amino acid and a large number of these are expected to be functional variants.

The daunting task for medical researchers is to distinguish variants that are pathogenic from those that have little or no detectable clinical effects.