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Xq22 deletions and correlation with distinct neurological disease traits in females: Further evidence for a contiguous gene syndrome

Authors :
Melanie A. Manning
Ping Fang
Julie R. Jones
Patricia A. Wight
Ken Inoue
Feng Zhang
James R. Lupski
Claudia M.B. Carvalho
Angelique Davis-Williams
Sakku Bai Naidu
Andrea Poretti
Soe Mar
Davut Pehlivan
Carly Jornlin
Hadia Hijazi
Fernanda S. Coelho
Xiaofei Song
Pankaj Patyal
Siddharth Srivastava
Claudia Gonzaga-Jauregui
Grace M. Hobson
Jennifer R. Taube
Barbara Torres
Laura Bernardini
Jennifer A. Lee
Michael J. Friez
Thomas Alberico
Andrea Hanson-Kahn
Sau Wai Cheung
Source :
Human Mutation. 41:150-168
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Hindawi Limited, 2019.

Abstract

Xq22 deletions that encompass PLP1 (Xq22-PLP1-DEL) are notable for variable expressivity of neurological disease traits in females ranging from a mild late-onset form of spastic paraplegia type 2 (MIM# 312920), sometimes associated with skewed X-inactivation, to an early-onset neurological disease trait (EONDT) of severe developmental delay, intellectual disability, and behavioral abnormalities. Size and gene content of Xq22-PLP1-DEL vary and were proposed as potential molecular etiologies underlying variable expressivity in carrier females where two smallest regions of overlap (SROs) were suggested to influence disease. We ascertained a cohort of eight unrelated patients harboring Xq22-PLP1-DEL and performed high-density array comparative genomic hybridization and breakpoint-junction sequencing. Molecular characterization of Xq22-PLP1-DEL from 17 cases (eight herein and nine published) revealed an overrepresentation of breakpoints that reside within repeats (11/17, ~65%) and the clustering of ~47% of proximal breakpoints in a genomic instability hotspot with characteristic non-B DNA density. These findings implicate a potential role for genomic architecture in stimulating the formation of Xq22-PLP1-DEL. The correlation of Xq22-PLP1-DEL gene content with neurological disease trait in female cases enabled refinement of the associated SROs to a single genomic interval containing six genes. Our data support the hypothesis that genes contiguous to PLP1 contribute to EONDT.

Details

ISSN :
10981004 and 10597794
Volume :
41
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human Mutation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....423d7100f94d7f74a7d5bf50aa5f936b