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Mendelian gene identification through mouse embryo viability screening

Authors :
Pilar Cacheiro
Carl Henrik Westerberg
Jesse Mager
Mary E. Dickinson
Lauryl M. J. Nutter
Violeta Muñoz-Fuentes
Chih-Wei Hsu
Ignatia B. Van den Veyver
Ann M. Flenniken
Colin McKerlie
Stephen A. Murray
Lydia Teboul
Jason D. Heaney
K. C. Kent Lloyd
Louise Lanoue
Robert E. Braun
Jacqueline K. White
Amie K. Creighton
Valerie Laurin
Ruolin Guo
Dawei Qu
Sara Wells
James Cleak
Rosie Bunton-Stasyshyn
Michelle Stewart
Jackie Harrisson
Jeremy Mason
Hamed Haseli Mashhadi
Helen Parkinson
Ann-Marie Mallon
International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium
Genomics England Research Consortium
Damian Smedley
Source :
Genome Medicine, Vol 14, Iss 1, Pp 1-20 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMC, 2022.

Abstract

Abstract Background The diagnostic rate of Mendelian disorders in sequencing studies continues to increase, along with the pace of novel disease gene discovery. However, variant interpretation in novel genes not currently associated with disease is particularly challenging and strategies combining gene functional evidence with approaches that evaluate the phenotypic similarities between patients and model organisms have proven successful. A full spectrum of intolerance to loss-of-function variation has been previously described, providing evidence that gene essentiality should not be considered as a simple and fixed binary property. Methods Here we further dissected this spectrum by assessing the embryonic stage at which homozygous loss-of-function results in lethality in mice from the International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium, classifying the set of lethal genes into one of three windows of lethality: early, mid, or late gestation lethal. We studied the correlation between these windows of lethality and various gene features including expression across development, paralogy and constraint metrics together with human disease phenotypes. We explored a gene similarity approach for novel gene discovery and investigated unsolved cases from the 100,000 Genomes Project. Results We found that genes in the early gestation lethal category have distinct characteristics and are enriched for genes linked with recessive forms of inherited metabolic disease. We identified several genes sharing multiple features with known biallelic forms of inborn errors of the metabolism and found signs of enrichment of biallelic predicted pathogenic variants among early gestation lethal genes in patients recruited under this disease category. We highlight two novel gene candidates with phenotypic overlap between the patients and the mouse knockouts. Conclusions Information on the developmental period at which embryonic lethality occurs in the knockout mouse may be used for novel disease gene discovery that helps to prioritise variants in unsolved rare disease cases.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Genetics
QH426-470

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1756994X
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Genome Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.412d46fbccfd45569d9db0ede072d45d
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13073-022-01118-7