| Literature DB >> 30155272 |
Jean Xavier1,2, Bo Zhou3, Alexander E Urban3, Claudine Laurent-Levinson1,4, Frédéric Bilan5,6, Xianglong Zhang3, Brigitte Gilbert-Dussardier5,6, Sylvie Viaux-Savelon1,2, Reenal Pattni3, Steve S Ho3, David Cohen1,2,4, Douglas F Levinson3.
Abstract
Microduplication of chromosome 1q21.1 is observed in ~0.03% of adults. It has a highly variable, incompletely penetrant phenotype that can include intellectual disability, global developmental delay, specific learning disabilities, autism, schizophrenia, heart anomalies and dysmorphic features. We evaluated a 10-year-old-male with a 1q21.1 duplication by CGH microarray. He presented with major attention deficits, phonological dysphasia, poor fine motor skills, dysmorphia and mild autistic features, but not the typical macrocephaly. Neuropsychiatric evaluation demonstrated a novel phenotype: an unusually large discrepancy between non-verbal capacities (borderline-impaired WISC-IV index scores of 70 for Working Memory and 68 for Processing Speed) vs. strong verbal skills - scores of 126 for Verbal Comprehension (superior) and 111 for Perceptual Reasoning (normal). HYDIN2 has been hypothesized to underlie macrocephaly and perhaps cognitive deficits in this syndrome, but assessment of HYDIN2 copy number by microarray is difficult because of extensive segmental duplications. We performed whole-genome sequencing which supported HYDIN2 duplication (chr1:146,370,001-148,590,000, 2.22 Mb, hg38). To evaluate copy number more rigorously we developed droplet digital PCR assays of HYDIN2 (targeting unique 1 kb and 6 kb insertions) and its paralog HYDIN (targeting a unique 154 bp segment outside the HYDIN2 overlap). In an independent cohort, ddPCR was concordant with previous microarray data. Duplication of HYDIN2 was confirmed in the patient by ddPCR. This case demonstrates that a large discrepancy of verbal and non-verbal abilities can occur in 1q21.1 duplication syndrome, but it remains unclear whether this has a specific genomic basis. These ddPCR assays may be useful for future research on HYDIN2 copy number.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30155272 PMCID: PMC6105585 DOI: 10.1038/s41525-018-0059-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Genom Med ISSN: 2056-7944 Impact factor: 8.617
Cognitive and developmental assessments at age 10
| Wechsler intelligence scale for children-IV | Scores | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| Verbal comprehension index | 126 (96th %ile) | Superior range |
| Similarities | 16 | (average range 8–12 on |
| Vocabulary | 10 | |
| Comprehension | 17 | |
| Perceptual reasoning index | 111 (77th %ile) | High average range |
| Picture completion | 10 | |
| Block design | 12 | |
| Matrix reasoning | 13 | |
| Working memory index | 70 (2nd %ile) | Borderline range |
| Digit span | 5 | |
| Digit letter sequences | 5 | |
| Processing speed index | 69 (2nd %ile) | Impaired range |
| Coding | 1 | |
| Autism diagnostic interview - revised | ||
| Social domain | 8 | Based on historical report for age 5. Only the Developmental domain is abnormal. |
| Communication domain and language | 3 | |
| Stereotyped behavior domain | 3 | |
| Developmental domain | 5 | |
| Test of everyday attention for children | <5% | |
| Selective visual attention | Notable impairment of attention and capacity for inhibition | |
| Sustained attention | ||
| Divided attention and intermodal processing | ||
| Inhibition | ||
| Attention control–cognitive flexibility | ||
| Oral and written language, memory, attention | ||
| Auditory verbal memory (L2MA) | ||
| Word recall | −2.1 SD | Short- and long-term memory impairments |
| Word recall with visual cues | −5.6 SD | |
| Deferred word recall | −4.1 SD | |
| Sentence recall | −1.7 SD | |
| Phonology–naming/word repetition (N-EEL) | Performance at age 10 consistent with child at age 6 | |
| Monosyllabic A | −5 < | |
| Monosyllabic B | −5 < | |
| Plurisyllabic | −5 < | |
| Lexical reception and production (L2MA) | ||
| Lex P | −1.3 SD | |
| Phonemic fluency | −2.8 SD | |
| Semantic fluency | −1.4 SD | |
| Antonyms | −1.2 SD | |
| Expression (ELO) | ||
| Utterance production | −1 SD | |
| Sentence repetition | −5 SD | |
| Motor skills—NEPSY | Scaled scores; expected ≥8 | |
| Fingertip tapping | 7 | Heterogeneous profile with slow and imprecise motor coordination |
| Design copying | 9 | |
| Manual motor sequences | 8 | |
| Imitation of hand position | 8 | |
| Visual motor precision | 3 | |
| Finger discrimination | 8 | |
| Block construction | 8 | |
| Logical and mathematical abilities—UDN-II | ||
| Developmental age 9–11, all subscales | Normal range | |
| Psychomotor assessment | ||
| Motor level and coordination (M-ABC) | −5.71 SD | |
| Hands movements imitation (EMG) | −5.29 SD | |
| Fingers movements imitation (EMG) | +0.64 SD | |
| Time and spatial organization (Bender) | DA = 6.5 years | |
| Geometry—REY-A FIGURE | ||
| Visual- and spatial-integration | ||
| Visual- and spatial-memory skills | ||
WISC – IV Wechsler intelligence scale for children – IV[27]
ADI-R autism diagnostic interview-revised[28]
TEA-Ch test of everyday attention for children[29]
L2MA spoken language, written language, memory, attention [30]
N-EEL new tests for language assessment[31]
ELO oral language assessment[32]
NEPSY developmental NEuropsychological assessment[33]
UDN-II construction et utilisation du nombre-2[34]
SD standard deviation
DA developmental age
M-ABC movement assessment battery for children[35]
EMG evaluation de la motricité gnosopraxique distale[36]
Bender visual-motor test[37]
Rey-A Rey–Osterrieth complex figure test[38]
Fig. 1The patient’s 1q21.1 duplication CNV and the ddPCR assay strategy for HYDIN2. a Read depth of ~40× whole-genome sequencing across 1q21.1 (top panel) and 16q22.2 (bottom panel) for Patient T and HapMap DNA NA12878, plotted using Integrative Genomics Viewer.[24] CNVnator[16] called a heterozygous duplication CNV (copy number = 3, yellow dashed vertical lines) on chr1:146370001-148580000 (2.21 Mb, hg38) for Patient T and no CNV for NA12878. No CNV is observed over HYDIN on 16q22.2 (chr16:70700000-71400000) for either individual. Y-axis: read count from 0–80. b Shown is the region of overlap between the paralogous genes HYDIN2 (1q21.1) and HYDIN (16q22.2, minus strand). Across the ~274 kb overlapping region, the two genes are estimated to share 99.4% sequence identity, with 264 Indels and 2049 mismatched bases.[9,25,26] A detailed analysis of the evolution of HYDIN2 demonstrated a more complex set of structural changes than can be shown here.[9] Also shown are the three regions targeted by the ddPCR copy number assays reported here: the two insertions (1 and 6 kbp) that are unique to HYDIN2, and a segment of unique sequence in HYDIN (outside the overlap region)