Whole-genome sequencing in patients with ciliopathies uncovers a novel recurrent tandem duplication in IFT140

  • Véronique Geoffroy
  • Corinne Stoetzel
  • Sophie Scheidecker
  • Elise Schaefer
  • Isabelle Perrault
  • Séverine Bär
  • Ariane Kröll
  • Marion Delbarre
  • Manuela Antin
  • Anne-Sophie Leuvrey
  • Charline Henry
  • Hélène Blanché
  • Eva Decker
  • Katja Kloth
  • Günter Klaus
  • Christoph Mache
  • Dominique Martin-Coignard
  • Steven McGinn
  • Anne Boland
  • Jean-François Deleuze
  • Sylvie Friant
  • Sophie Saunier
  • Jean-Michel Rozet
  • Carsten Bergmann
  • Hélène Dollfus
  • Jean Muller

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

Ciliopathies represent a wide spectrum of rare diseases with overlapping phenotypes and a high genetic heterogeneity. Among those, IFT140 is implicated in a variety of phenotypes ranging from isolated retinis pigmentosa to more syndromic cases. Using whole-genome sequencing in patients with uncharacterized ciliopathies, we identified a novel recurrent tandem duplication of exon 27-30 (6.7 kb) in IFT140, c.3454-488_4182+2588dup p.(Tyr1152_Thr1394dup), missed by whole-exome sequencing. Pathogenicity of the mutation was assessed on the patients' skin fibroblasts. Several hundreds of patients with a ciliopathy phenotype were screened and biallelic mutations were identified in 11 families representing 12 pathogenic variants of which seven are novel. Among those unrelated families especially with a Mainzer-Saldino syndrome, eight carried the same tandem duplication (two at the homozygous state and six at the heterozygous state). In conclusion, we demonstrated the implication of structural variations in IFT140-related diseases expanding its mutation spectrum. We also provide evidences for a unique genomic event mediated by an Alu-Alu recombination occurring on a shared haplotype. We confirm that whole-genome sequencing can be instrumental in the ability to detect structural variants for genomic disorders.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN1059-7794
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 07.2018
PubMed 29688594