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Genome sequencing for detection of pathogenic deep intronic variation: A clinical case report illustrating opportunities and challenges

Authors :
Christian R. Marshall
Steven P. Miller
Melissa Bradley
Susan Walker
Lukasz Jagiello
Alyssa C. M. Joynt
Kamiar Mireskandari
Stephen W. Scherer
M. Stephen Meyn
Melissa T. Carter
Helen M. Branson
Tayyaba Khan
Robin Z. Hayeems
Diane Wilson
Sylvia Lamoureux
Gregory Costain
Susan Blaser
Source :
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A. 185:3129-3135
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Variants in JAM3 have been reported in four families manifesting a severe autosomal recessive disorder characterized by hemorrhagic destruction of the brain, subependymal calcification, and cataracts. We describe a 7-year-old male with a similar presentation found by research-based quad genome sequencing to have two novel splicing variants in trans in JAM3, including one deep intronic variant (NM_032801.4: c.256+1260G>C) not detectable by standard exome sequencing. Targeted sequencing of RNA isolated from transformed lymphoblastoid cell lines confirmed that each of the two variants has a deleterious effect on JAM3 mRNA splicing. The role for genome sequencing as a clinical diagnostic test extends to those patients with phenotypes strongly suggestive of a specific Mendelian disorder, especially when the causal genetic variant(s) are not found by a more targeted approach. Barriers to diagnosis via identification of pathogenic deep intronic variation include lack of laboratory consensus regarding in silico splicing prediction tools and limited access to clinically validated confirmatory RNA experiments.

Details

ISSN :
15524833 and 15524825
Volume :
185
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........9ac69aaababbf4c06949ce0a35172271