“…Thus, the study of ROH length and burden of deleterious variation can provide important insights into the human demographic history and clinical applications ( Ceballos et al., 2018 ; Szpiech et al., 2013 ). Most of the WES available for Arabians were obtained in patient cohorts ( Almaghlouth et al., 2021 ; Monies et al., 2019 ; Project Team, 2015 ; Wahabi et al., 2017 ). Fewer WES are available for the general population: one obtained in Qatari populations identified eight hematologic variants, five metabolic, four eye-related, three inflammatory, three cardiovascular and three neurologic as the most common disease-related variants in those consanguineous cohorts ( Rodriguez-Flores et al., 2014 ); an important cohort, the Greater Middle East (GME) Variome Project containing 2,497 individuals from 19 Arab and non-Arab Muslim countries ( Scott et al., 2016 ) detected large and rare homozygous blocks, compatible with recent consanguineous matings, rendering easy to identify genes harboring putatively high-impact homozygous variants.…”