AI Article Synopsis

  • For some individuals with Mendelian diseases, clinical whole exome sequencing (WES) may only reveal one pathogenic variant, complicating genetic diagnosis.
  • Long-read sequencing, like Nanopore technology, can detect larger structural variants (SVs) that short reads often miss, as demonstrated in a case of glycogen storage disease type Ia (GSD-Ia).
  • The use of long-read sequencing led to the identification of a significant deletion in the gene, allowing successful preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) and healthy embryo selection during family planning.

Article Abstract

Background: For a proportion of individuals judged clinically to have a recessive Mendelian disease, only one heterozygous pathogenic variant can be found from clinical whole exome sequencing (WES), posing a challenge to genetic diagnosis and genetic counseling. One possible reason is the limited ability to detect disease causal structural variants (SVs) from short reads sequencing technologies. Long reads sequencing can produce longer reads (typically 1000 bp or longer), therefore offering greatly improved ability to detect SVs that may be missed by short-read sequencing.

Results: Here we describe a case study, where WES identified only one heterozygous pathogenic variant for an individual suspected to have glycogen storage disease type Ia (GSD-Ia), which is an autosomal recessive disease caused by bi-allelic mutations in the gene. Through Nanopore long-read whole-genome sequencing, we identified a 7.1 kb deletion covering two exons on the other allele, suggesting that complex structural variants (SVs) may explain a fraction of cases when the second pathogenic allele is missing from WES on recessive diseases. Both breakpoints of the deletion are within Alu elements, and we designed Sanger sequencing and quantitative PCR assays based on the breakpoints for preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) for the family planning on another child. Four embryos were obtained after in vitro fertilization (IVF), and an embryo without deletion in was transplanted after PGD and was confirmed by prenatal diagnosis, postnatal diagnosis, and subsequent lack of disease symptoms after birth.

Conclusions: In summary, we present one of the first examples of using long-read sequencing to identify causal yet complex SVs in exome-negative patients, which subsequently enabled successful personalized PGD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6162922PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s41065-018-0069-1DOI Listing

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