1. Revealing parental mosaicism: the hidden answer to the recurrence of apparent de novo variants
- Author
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Mianne Lee, Adrian C. Y. Lui, Joshua C. K. Chan, Phoenix H. L. Doong, Anna K. Y. Kwong, Christopher C. Y. Mak, Raymond H. W. Li, Anita S. Y. Kan, and Brian H. Y. Chung
- Subjects
Parental mosaicism ,Gonadal mosaicism ,Gonosomal mosaicism ,De novo mutation ,Recurrence risk ,Droplet digital PCR ,Medicine ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Abstract Mosaicism refers to the presence of two or more populations of genetically distinct cells within an individual, all of which originate from a single zygote. Previous literature estimated the percentage of parental mosaicism ranged from 0.33 to 25.9%. In this study, parents whose children had previously been diagnosed with developmental disorders with an apparent de novo variant were recruited. Peripheral blood, buccal and semen samples were collected from these parents if available for the detection of potential parental mosaicism using droplet digital PCR, complemented with the method of blocker displacement amplification. Among the 20 families being analyzed, we report four families with parental mosaicism (4/20, 20%). Two families have maternal gonosomal mosaicism (EYA1 and EBF3) and one family has paternal gonadal mosaicism (CHD7) with a pathogenic/ likely pathogenic variant. One family has a paternal gonosomal mosaicism with a variant of uncertain significance (FLNC) with high clinical relevance. The detectable variant allele frequency in our cohort ranged from 8.7–35.9%, limit of detection 0.08–0.16% based on our in-house EBF3 assay. Detecting parental mosaicism not only informs family with a more accurate recurrence risk, but also facilitates medical teams to create appropriate plans for pregnancy and delivery, offering the most suitable care.
- Published
- 2023
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