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Identification of compound heterozygous variants in the noncoding RNU4ATAC gene in a Chinese family with two successive foetuses with severe microcephaly

Authors :
Ye Wang
Xueli Wu
Liu Du
Ju Zheng
Songqing Deng
Xin Bi
Qiuyan Chen
Hongning Xie
Claude Férec
David N. Cooper
Yanmin Luo
Qun Fang
Jian-Min Chen
Source :
Human Genomics, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-8 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
BMC, 2018.

Abstract

Abstract Background Whole-exome sequencing (WES) over the last few years has been increasingly employed for clinical diagnosis. However, one caveat with its use is that it inevitably fails to detect disease-causative variants that occur within noncoding RNA genes. Our experience in identifying pathogenic variants in the noncoding RNU4ATAC gene, in a Chinese family where two successive foetuses had been affected by severe microcephaly, is a case in point. These foetuses exhibited remarkably similar phenotypes in terms of their microcephaly and brain abnormalities; however, the paucity of other characteristic phenotypic features had made a precise diagnosis impossible. Given that no external causative factors had been reported/identified during the pregnancies, we sought a genetic cause for the phenotype in the proband, the second affected foetus. Results A search for chromosomal abnormalities and pathogenic copy number variants proved negative. WES was also negative. These initial failures prompted us to consider the potential role of RNU4ATAC, a noncoding gene implicated in microcephalic osteodysplastic primordial dwarfism type-1 (MOPD1), a severe autosomal recessive disease characterised by dwarfism, severe microcephaly and neurological abnormalities. Subsequent targeted sequencing of RNU4ATAC resulted in the identification of compound heterozygous variants, one being the most frequently reported MOPD1-causative mutation (51G>A), whereas the other was a novel 29T>A variant. Four distinct lines of evidence (allele frequency in normal populations, evolutionary conservation of the affected nucleotide, occurrence within a known mutational hotspot for MOPD1-causative variants and predicted effect on RNA secondary structure) allowed us to conclude that 29T>A is a new causative variant for MOPD1. Conclusions Our findings highlight the limitations of WES in failing to detect variants within noncoding RNA genes and provide support for a role for whole-genome sequencing as a first-tier genetic test in paediatric medicine. Additionally, the identification of a novel RNU4ATAC variant within the mutational hotspot for MOPD1-causative variants further strengthens the critical role of the 5′ stem-loop structure of U4atac in health and disease. Finally, this analysis enabled us to provide prenatal diagnosis and genetic counselling for the mother’s third pregnancy, the first report of its kind in the context of inherited RNU4ATAC variants.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14797364
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Human Genomics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.20163f49eb25449e914778b536efc332
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40246-018-0135-9