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Improving genetic diagnosis in Mendelian disease with transcriptome sequencing

Cited 428 time in Web of Science Cited 461 time in Scopus
Authors

Cummings, Beryl B.; Marshall, Jamie L.; Tukiainen, Taru; Lek, Monkol; Donkervoort, Sandra; Foley, A. Reghan; Bolduc, Veronique; Waddell, Leigh B.; Sandaradura, Sarah A.; O'Grady, Gina L.; Estrella, Elicia; Reddy, Hemakumar M.; Zhao, Fengmei; Weisburd, Ben; Karczewski, Konrad J.; O'Donnell-Luria, Anne H.; Birnbaum, Daniel; Sarkozy, Anna; Hu, Ying; Gonorazky, Hernan; Claeys, Kristl; Joshi, Himanshu; Bournazos, Adam; Oates, Emily C.; Ghaoui, Roula; Davis, Mark R.; Laing, Nigel G.; Topf, Ana; Kang, Peter B.; Beggs, Alan H.; North, Kathryn N.; Straub, Volker; Dowling, James J.; Muntoni, Francesco; Clarke, Nigel F.; Cooper, Sandra T.; Bonnemann, Carsten G.; MacArthur, Daniel G.; GTEx Consortium; Han, Buhm

Issue Date
2017-04
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Citation
Science Translational Medicine, Vol.9 No.386, p. eaal5209
Abstract
Exome and whole-genome sequencing are becoming increasingly routine approaches in Mendelian disease diagnosis. Despite their success, the current diagnostic rate for genomic analyses across a variety of rare diseases is approximately 25 to 50%. We explore the utility of transcriptome sequencing [RNA sequencing (RNA-seq)] as a complementary diagnostic tool in a cohort of 50 patients with genetically undiagnosed rare muscle disorders. We describe an integrated approach to analyze patient muscle RNA-seq, leveraging an analysis framework focused on the detection of transcript-level changes that are unique to the patient compared to more than 180 control skeletal muscle samples. We demonstrate the power of RNA-seq to validate candidate splice-disrupting mutations and to identify splice-altering variants in both exonic and deep intronic regions, yielding an overall diagnosis rate of 35%. We also report the discovery of a highly recurrent de novo intronic mutation in COL6A 1 that results in a dominantly acting splice-gain event, disrupting the critical glycine repeat motif of the triple helical domain. We identify this pathogenic variant in a total of 27 genetically unsolved patients in an external collagen VI-like dystrophy cohort, thus explaining approximately 25% of patients clinically suggestive of having collagen VI dystrophy in whom prior genetic analysis is negative. Overall, this study represents a large systematic application of transcriptome sequencing to rare disease diagnosis and highlights its utility for the detection and interpretation of variants missed by current standard diagnostic approaches.
ISSN
1946-6234
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/191533
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.aal5209
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  • College of Medicine
  • Department of Medicine
Research Area Bioinformatics, Computational Biology, Genomics, Human Leukocyte Antigen, Statistical Genetics

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