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Quantitative dissection of multilocus pathogenic variation in an Egyptian infant with severe neurodevelopmental disorder resulting from multiple molecular diagnoses.

Authors :
Herman, Isabella
Jolly, Angad
Du, Haowei
Dawood, Moez
Abdel‐Salam, Ghada M. H.
Marafi, Dana
Mitani, Tadahiro
Calame, Daniel G.
Coban‐Akdemir, Zeynep
Fatih, Jawid M.
Hegazy, Ibrahim
Jhangiani, Shalini N.
Gibbs, Richard A.
Pehlivan, Davut
Posey, Jennifer E.
Lupski, James R.
Source :
American Journal of Medical Genetics. Part A; Mar2022, Vol. 188 Issue 3, p735-750, 16p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Genomic sequencing and clinical genomics have demonstrated that substantial subsets of atypical and/or severe disease presentations result from multilocus pathogenic variation (MPV) causing blended phenotypes. In an infant with a severe neurodevelopmental disorder, four distinct molecular diagnoses were found by exome sequencing (ES). The blended phenotype that includes brain malformation, dysmorphism, and hypotonia was dissected using the Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO). ES revealed variants in CAPN3 (c.259C > G:p.L87V), MUSK (c.1781C > T:p.A594V), NAV2 (c.1996G > A:p.G666R), and ZC4H2 (c.595A > C:p.N199H). CAPN3, MUSK, and ZC4H2 are established disease genes linked to limb‐girdle muscular dystrophy (OMIM# 253600), congenital myasthenia (OMIM# 616325), and Wieacker–Wolff syndrome (WWS; OMIM# 314580), respectively. NAV2 is a retinoic‐acid responsive novel disease gene candidate with biological roles in neurite outgrowth and cerebellar dysgenesis in mouse models. Using semantic similarity, we show that no gene identified by ES individually explains the proband phenotype, but rather the totality of the clinically observed disease is explained by the combination of disease‐contributing effects of the identified genes. These data reveal that multilocus pathogenic variation can result in a blended phenotype with each gene affecting a different part of the nervous system and nervous system‐muscle connection. We provide evidence from this n = 1 study that in patients with MPV and complex blended phenotypes resulting from multiple molecular diagnoses, quantitative HPO analysis can allow for dissection of phenotypic contribution of both established disease genes and novel disease gene candidates not yet proven to cause human disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15524825
Volume :
188
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
American Journal of Medical Genetics. Part A
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
155217991
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.a.62565