| Literature DB >> 27894357 |
Rocio Acuna-Hidalgo1, Joris A Veltman2,3, Alexander Hoischen4.
Abstract
Aside from inheriting half of the genome of each of our parents, we are born with a small number of novel mutations that occurred during gametogenesis and postzygotically. Recent genome and exome sequencing studies of parent-offspring trios have provided the first insights into the number and distribution of these de novo mutations in health and disease, pointing to risk factors that increase their number in the offspring. De novo mutations have been shown to be a major cause of severe early-onset genetic disorders such as intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorder, and other developmental diseases. In fact, the occurrence of novel mutations in each generation explains why these reproductively lethal disorders continue to occur in our population. Recent studies have also shown that de novo mutations are predominantly of paternal origin and that their number increases with advanced paternal age. Here, we review the recent literature on de novo mutations, covering their detection, biological characterization, and medical impact.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27894357 PMCID: PMC5125044 DOI: 10.1186/s13059-016-1110-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Fig. 1Mechanisms of de novo mutations. De novo mutations can arise because of static properties of the genome, such as the underlying sequence (deamination of methylated CpGs, transitions versus transversions) or due to erroneous pairing of nucleotides during DNA replication. However, de novo mutations can also occur in relation to cell-specific properties such as the chromatin state, transcriptional status, and gene expression levels. Mutational hotspots for genomic rearrangements are largely determined by the underlying genomic architecture. One such example is given for non-allelic homologous recombination (NAHR). Arrows represent the influence of each feature on the de novo mutation rate. Green arrows pointing upwards indicate elevated mutability; red arrows pointing downwards indicate lower mutability. M methyl group modifying cytosine
Comparison of inherited and de novo variants
| Inherited variants | De novo mutations | |
|---|---|---|
| Single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) | 3.5 to 4.4 million [ | 44 to 82 [ |
| Number of coding SNVs | 22,186 [ | 1–2 [ |
| Insertions and deletions (indels <50 bp) | ~550,000 [ | 2.9–9 [ |
| Large indels (50–5000 bp)a | ~1000 [ | 0.16 [ |
| Copy-number variations (CNVs) | ~160 [ | 0.0154 [ |
| Selection pressure in previous generation(s) | High | None |
| Damaging capacity of variants | Majority with small effect | High |
| Differences in population | Yes | None |
| Parental/paternal age effect | None | Strong |
| Detection of variants | Imputable | Not imputable |
| Amenable to positional cloningc | Yes | No |
aOwing to technical limitations, the number and mutation rate for large indels ranging between 50 and 5000 bp remain uncertain. Novel sequencing approaches will likely provide more-accurate estimates (see Chaisson et al. [205])
bPer generation for CNVs larger than 100 kb
cPositional cloning by linkage analysis or homozygosity mapping
Fig. 2Timing of de novo mutations (DNMs). Sperm cells have undergone approximately 100 to 150 mitoses in a 20-year-old man, whereas oocytes have gone through 22 mitoses in a woman of the same age (left). As a result of errors in both replication of the genome and repair of DNA damage occurring during parental embryogenesis, gametogenesis, or as postzygotic events in the offspring, DNMs arise in each new generation. Advanced parental age is associated with an increase in the number of de novo mutations (right). The male germline adds 23 mitoses per year, entailing that a spermatogonial stem cell in a 40-year-old man has undergone more than 600 cell mitoses. Each additional year in paternal age at conception adds one to three de novo mutations to the genome of the offspring. Oogenesis has a fixed number of mitoses, but mutations accumulate over time possibly owing to failure to repair DNA damage. The increase in number of de novo mutations with maternal age is lower: 0.24 extra de novo mutations for each additional year of maternal age at conception. Cell lineages modified from [238]. Somatic cells are showed in orange, the male germline is shown in blue, and the female germline is shown in purple. Blue stars represent postzygotic mutations present in the germline and in somatic cells; yellow stars represent mutations arising exclusively in the germline; red stars represent somatic mutations arising during embryonic development or post-natal life which are absent from germline cells. Figure footnotes: 1The ratio of paternal to maternal mutations originating from parental gonosomal mosaicism is 1:1; 2the ratio of paternal to maternal germline de novo mutations is 4:1; 3the ratio of paternal to maternal postzygotic de novo mutations is 1:1; 4this range is based on the average number of de novo mutations published elsewhere [9, 10, 12, 13, 15] irrespective of parental age