Genomic mosaicism in the pathogenesis and inheritance of a Rett syndrome cohort
Purpose To determine the role of mosaicism in the pathogenesis and inheritance of Rett and Rett-like disorders. Methods We recruited 471 Rett and Rett-like patients. Panel-sequencing targeting MECP2 , CDKL5 , and FOXG1 was performed. Mosaicism was quantified in 147 patients by a Bayesian genotyper....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Genetics in medicine 2019-06, Vol.21 (6), p.1330-1338 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Purpose
To determine the role of mosaicism in the pathogenesis and inheritance of Rett and Rett-like disorders.
Methods
We recruited 471 Rett and Rett-like patients. Panel-sequencing targeting
MECP2
,
CDKL5
, and
FOXG1
was performed. Mosaicism was quantified in 147 patients by a Bayesian genotyper. Candidates were validated by amplicon sequencing and digital PCR. Germline mosaicism of 21 fathers with daughters carrying pathogenic
MECP2
variants was further quantified.
Results
Pathogenic variants of
MECP2/CDKL5
/
FOXG1
were found in 324/471 (68.7%) patients. Somatic
MECP2
mosaicism was confirmed in 5/471 (1.1%) patients, including 3/18 males (16.7%) and 2/453 females (0.4%). Three of the five patients with somatic
MECP2
mosaicism had mosaicism at MECP2-Arg106. Germline
MECP2
mosaicism was detected in 5/21 (23.8%) fathers.
Conclusion
This is the first systematic screening of somatic and paternal germline
MECP2
mosaicism at a cohort level. Our findings indicate that somatic
MECP2
mosaicism contributes directly to the pathogenicity of Rett syndrome, especially in male patients. MECP2-Arg106 might be a mosaic hotspot. The high proportion of paternal germline
MECP2
mosaicism indicates an underestimated mechanism underlying the paternal origin bias of
MECP2
variants. Finally, this study provides an empirical foundation for future studies of genetic disorders caused by de novo variations of strong paternal origin. |
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ISSN: | 1098-3600 1530-0366 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41436-018-0348-2 |