| Literature DB >> 23889995 |
Kai Wang1, Cecilia Kim2, Jonathan Bradfield2, Yunfei Guo3, Elina Toskala2, Frederick G Otieno2, Cuiping Hou2, Kelly Thomas2, Christopher Cardinale2, Gholson J Lyon4, Ryan Golhar2, Hakon Hakonarson5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Whole-exome sequencing has identified the causes of several Mendelian diseases by analyzing multiple unrelated cases, but it is more challenging to resolve the cause of extremely rare and suspected Mendelian diseases from individual families. We identified a family quartet with two children, both affected with a previously unreported disease, characterized by progressive muscular weakness and cardiomyopathy, with normal intelligence. During the course of the study, we identified one additional unrelated patient with a comparable phenotype.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23889995 PMCID: PMC3971341 DOI: 10.1186/gm471
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Med ISSN: 1756-994X Impact factor: 11.117
Clinical features of the syndrome, based on the three probands in two families
| Feature | Description |
|---|---|
| Growth | Normal growth |
| Development | Normal early milestones and intelligence, presenting with neuromuscular weakness in childhood |
| Facial | No abnormalities noticed |
| Musculoskeletal | No bone deformities; progressive myopathy |
| Integument | Normal |
| Cardiac | Progressive cardiomyopathya |
| Liver | Normal |
| Neurologic | Muscular weakness and muscle atrophy |
| Genital | Normal |
aThe severity of progressive cardiomyopathy differs between patients.
Figure 1The loss-of-function mutations within . (a,b) Pedigree structure for the two families, respectively. (c) Genome browser shots illustrating the location of the mutations within RBCK1. Multiple zooming levels are shown from the chromosome to the gene structure, and then to three exons harboring the mutations.
Figure 2Validation of mutations in . (a,b) Validation on the nonsense mutation and frameshift indel in family 1. The identified mutations are labeled with arrows. The nucleotide sequences of the insertion were resolved from the sequence trace. (c) SNP array showed a 1.2 Mb copy-neutral region-of-homozygosity (ROH) on chromosome 20p in the proband from family 2. The upper panel (log R ratio) represents normalized total signal intensity, demonstrating the lack of copy number changes in the 1.2 Mb region. The lower panel (B allele frequency) represents normalized allelic intensity ratio, demonstrating the lack of heterozygous SNPs in the 1.2 Mb region. The location of RBCK1 is marked by the grey vertical line. (d,e) Validation of a homozygous intronic variant and a homozygous splice variant in the proband from family 2.
Figure 3Integrative Genomics Viewer screen shots of the RNA-Seq data on three subjects from two families. The RNA-Seq experiments were performed using RNAs extracted from lymphoblastoid cell lines. The results validated the presence of a splice variant at the exon-intron boundary in the proband from family 2 (subject II-3), and that the intronic regions are transcribed between exon 5 and exon 6. However, the variant is not present in family 1, and exons 5 and 6 are correctly spliced in two subjects (subjects II-1 and I-2) in family 1.