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WGS and RNA Studies Diagnose Noncoding DMD Variants in Males With High Creatine Kinase

Authors :
David R. Mowat
Taru Tukiainen
Himanshu Joshi
Ben Weisburd
Gina L. O'Grady
Elise Valkanas
Fathimath Faiz
Adam Bournazos
Simon Sadedin
Rebecca Gooding
Frances J. Evesson
Katherine R. Neas
Amanda Charlton
Hugo Sampaio
Michel Tchan
Kristi J. Jones
Monkol Lek
Nicole Graf
Jamie L. Marshall
Mark R. Davis
Charles Chan
Min-Xia Wang
Beryl B. Cummings
Daniel G. MacArthur
Alan Ma
Leigh B. Waddell
Samantha J. Bryen
Susan Arbuckle
Emily C. Oates
Sandra T. Cooper
Nigel F. Clarke
Sarah A. Sandaradura
Diane Kenwright
Michelle A. Farrar
Source :
Neurology Genetics. 7:e554
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2021.

Abstract

ObjectiveTo describe the diagnostic utility of whole-genome sequencing and RNA studies in boys with suspected dystrophinopathy, for whom multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification and exomic parallel sequencing failed to yield a genetic diagnosis, and to use remnant normal DMD splicing in 3 families to define critical levels of wild-type dystrophin bridging clinical spectrums of Duchenne to myalgia.MethodsExome, genome, and/or muscle RNA sequencing was performed for 7 males with elevated creatine kinase. PCR of muscle-derived complementary DNA (cDNA) studied consequences for DMD premessenger RNA (pre-mRNA) splicing. Quantitative Western blot was used to determine levels of dystrophin, relative to control muscle.ResultsSplice-altering intronic single nucleotide variants or structural rearrangements in DMD were identified in all 7 families. Four individuals, with abnormal splicing causing a premature stop codon and nonsense-mediated decay, expressed remnant levels of normally spliced DMD mRNA. Quantitative Western blot enabled correlation of wild-type dystrophin and clinical severity, with 0%–5% dystrophin conferring a Duchenne phenotype, 10% ± 2% a Becker phenotype, and 15% ± 2% dystrophin associated with myalgia without manifesting weakness.ConclusionsWhole-genome sequencing relied heavily on RNA studies to identify DMD splice-altering variants. Short-read RNA sequencing was regularly confounded by the effectiveness of nonsense-mediated mRNA decay and low read depth of the giant DMD mRNA. PCR of muscle cDNA provided a simple, yet informative approach. Highly relevant to genetic therapies for dystrophinopathies, our data align strongly with previous studies of mutant dystrophin in Becker muscular dystrophy, with the collective conclusion that a fractional increase in levels of normal dystrophin between 5% and 20% is clinically significant.

Details

ISSN :
23767839
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurology Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........84786fa6905974c6d00e8b619bc4f069
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1212/nxg.0000000000000554