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Exome sequencing in suspected monogenic dyslipidemias

Authors :
Sigrid W. Fouchier
Sekar Kathiresan
James G. Wilson
Marjorie Risman
Benjamin M. Neale
Catherine Boileau
Masa-aki Kawashiri
M. Mahdi Motazacker
Mathilde Varret
John J.P. Kastelein
Daniel J. Rader
G. Kees Hovingh
Clive R. Pullinger
Jorge F. Haller
Maurizio Averna
Stephen S. Rich
Angelo B. Cefalù
Isabelle Ruel
Jacques Genest
Nathan O. Stitziel
Rahul C. Deo
Namrata Gupta
Davide Noto
Deborah A. Nickerson
John P. Kane
Hiroshi Mabuchi
Jean-Pierre Rabès
Stacey Gabriel
Zuhier Awan
Mason W. Freeman
Deborah N. Farlow
Patrizia Tarugi
Atsushi Nohara
Mark J. Daly
Jay Shendure
Gina M. Peloso
Hayato Tada
Masakazu Yamagishi
Marianne Abifadel
Daniel B. Larach
ACS - Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences
Human Genetics
Vascular Medicine
Stitziel, N.
Peloso, G.
Abifadel, M.
Cefalu, A.
Fouchier, S.
Motazacker, M.
Tada, H.
Larach, D.
Awan, Z.
Haller, J.
Pullinger, C.
Varret, M.
Rabès, J.
Noto, D.
Tarugi, P.
Kawashiri, M.
Nohara, A.
Yamagishi, M.
Risman, M.
Deo, R.
Ruel, I.
Shendure, J.
Nickerson, D.
Wilson, J.
Rich, S.
Gupta, N.
Farlow, D.
Neale, B.
Daly, M.
Kane, J.
Freeman, M.
Genest, J.
Rader, D.
Mabuchi, H.
Kastelein, J.
Hovingh, G.
Averna, M.
Gabriel, S.
Boileau, C.
Kathiresan, S.
Source :
Circulation. Cardiovascular genetics, 8(2), 343-350. Lippincott Williams and Wilkins, Circulation. Cardiovascular genetics, vol 8, iss 2
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Background— Exome sequencing is a promising tool for gene mapping in Mendelian disorders. We used this technique in an attempt to identify novel genes underlying monogenic dyslipidemias. Methods and Results— We performed exome sequencing on 213 selected family members from 41 kindreds with suspected Mendelian inheritance of extreme levels of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (after candidate gene sequencing excluded known genetic causes for high low-density lipoprotein cholesterol families) or high-density lipoprotein cholesterol. We used standard analytic approaches to identify candidate variants and also assigned a polygenic score to each individual to account for their burden of common genetic variants known to influence lipid levels. In 9 families, we identified likely pathogenic variants in known lipid genes ( ABCA1 , APOB , APOE , LDLR, LIPA , and PCSK9 ); however, we were unable to identify obvious genetic etiologies in the remaining 32 families, despite follow-up analyses. We identified 3 factors that limited novel gene discovery: (1) imperfect sequencing coverage across the exome hid potentially causal variants; (2) large numbers of shared rare alleles within families obfuscated causal variant identification; and (3) individuals from 15% of families carried a significant burden of common lipid-related alleles, suggesting complex inheritance can masquerade as monogenic disease. Conclusions— We identified the genetic basis of disease in 9 of 41 families; however, none of these represented novel gene discoveries. Our results highlight the promise and limitations of exome sequencing as a discovery technique in suspected monogenic dyslipidemias. Considering the confounders identified may inform the design of future exome sequencing studies.

Details

ISSN :
19423268 and 1942325X
Volume :
8
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation. Cardiovascular genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4184a0d6233bf9ec4fc82ddc0286c25c