Pathogenic cryptic variants detectable through exome data reanalysis significantly increase the diagnostic yield in Joubert syndrome.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_0FE1AE2BBAEE
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Pathogenic cryptic variants detectable through exome data reanalysis significantly increase the diagnostic yield in Joubert syndrome.
Journal
European journal of human genetics
Author(s)
D'Abrusco F., Serpieri V., Taccagni C.M., Garau J., Cattaneo L., Boggioni M., Gana S., Battini R., Bertini E., Zanni G., Boltshauser E., Borgatti R., Romaniello R., Signorini S., Leuzzi V., Caputi C., Manti F., D'Arrigo S., De Laurentiis A., Graziano C., Lemke J.R., Morelli F., Petković Ramadža D., Sirchia F., Giorgio E., Valente E.M.
ISSN
1476-5438 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1018-4813
Publication state
In Press
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: aheadofprint
Abstract
Joubert syndrome (JS) is a genetically heterogeneous neurodevelopmental ciliopathy. Despite exome sequencing (ES), several patients remain undiagnosed. This study aims to increase the diagnostic yield by uncovering cryptic variants through targeted ES reanalysis. We first focused on 26 patients in whom ES only disclosed heterozygous pathogenic coding variants in a JS gene. We reanalyzed raw ES data searching for copy number variants (CNVs) and intronic variants affecting splicing. We validated CNVs through real-time PCR or chromosomal microarray, and splicing variants through RT-PCR or minigenes. Cryptic variants were then searched in additional 44 ES-negative JS individuals. We identified cryptic "second hits" in 14 of 26 children (54%) and biallelic cryptic variants in 3 of 44 (7%), reaching a definite diagnosis in 17 of 70 (overall diagnostic gain 24%). We show that CNVs and intronic splicing variants are a common mutational mechanism in JS; more importantly, we demonstrate that a significant proportion of such variants can be disclosed simply through a focused reanalysis of available ES data, with a significantly increase of the diagnostic yield especially among patients previously found to carry heterozygous coding variants in the KIAA0586, CC2D2A and CPLANE1 genes.
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
25/10/2024 14:12
Last modification date
31/10/2024 7:13
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