| Literature DB >> 30279644 |
Hefan Miao1,2, Jiapeng Zhou3, Qi Yang3, Fan Liang3, Depeng Wang3, Na Ma1,2, Bodi Gao1,2, Juan Du1,2, Ge Lin1,2, Kai Wang4, Qianjun Zhang1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: For a proportion of individuals judged clinically to have a recessive Mendelian disease, only one heterozygous pathogenic variant can be found from clinical whole exome sequencing (WES), posing a challenge to genetic diagnosis and genetic counseling. One possible reason is the limited ability to detect disease causal structural variants (SVs) from short reads sequencing technologies. Long reads sequencing can produce longer reads (typically 1000 bp or longer), therefore offering greatly improved ability to detect SVs that may be missed by short-read sequencing.Entities:
Keywords: G6PC; GSD-Ia; Long-read sequencing; PGD; Structural variants; WES; Whole-exome sequencing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30279644 PMCID: PMC6162922 DOI: 10.1186/s41065-018-0069-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hereditas ISSN: 0018-0661 Impact factor: 3.271
Biochemical indicators of the proband suggest a probable diagnosis of GSD-Ia
| Parameter | Tested value | Reference range | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Glucose (mmol/L) | 0.17↓ | 3.6–6.1 | Abnormal |
| CO2 (mmol/L) | 7.1↓ | 19–33 | Abnormal |
| Sodium (mmol/L) | 132.7 | 135–153 | |
| Chlorinum (mmol/L) | 89.2↓ | 96–108 | Abnormal |
| Calcium (mmol/L) | 2.65 | 2–2.6 | |
| Total bile acid (μmol/L) | 16.7↑ | 0–12 | Abnormal |
| ALT (IU/L) | 257.4↑ | 7–56 | Abnormal |
| AST (IU/L) | 357.6↑ | 0–40 | Abnormal |
| Triglyceride (mmol/L) | 5.74↑ | 0.52–1.56 | Abnormal |
| HDL (mmol/L) | 2.01↑ | 0.88–1.76 | Abnormal |
Abbreviations: ALT alanine aminotransferase, AST aspartate aminotransferase, HDL high-density lipoproteins
Primers for Sanger sequencing. No.1–10: Exon primers; No.11–20: Quantitative real-time primers; No.21–26: Breakpoint primers
| No. | Primer | Position | Sequence (5′-3′) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | G6PC-1F | Exon1 | CACCACCAAGCCTGGAATAAC |
| 2 | G6PC-1R | CAGACATTGCGAGAGCGAATG | |
| 3 | G6PC-2F | Exon2 | GCATTCATTCAGTAACCC |
| 4 | G6PC-2R | AGACAGAAGCTGAGTGGA | |
| 5 | G6PC-3F | Exon3 | CACCTTTACTCCATTCTCTTTC |
| 6 | G6PC-3R | GTGCCACAACTCTTAATCAGCG | |
| 7 | G6PC-4F | Exon4 | CACTGAGAGCACCTAAGTTTGC |
| 8 | G6PC-4R | CTGATTACACACAGGATGTGG | |
| 9 | G6PC-5F | Exon5 | CATGTCACCCACTCCTCCAAAC |
| 10 | G6PC-5R | GTCACTTGCTCCAAATACCAGTG | |
| 11 | G6PC-1ForF | 5′-Flanking introns | TTTCACAGTCCTCCGTGACC |
| 12 | G6PC-1ForR | AGGGCTTCTATATCTTGAGCTTTC | |
| 13 | G6PC-1QF | Exon1 | TCCAGTCAACACATTACCTCCA |
| 14 | G6PC-1QR | TAAAGACGAGGTTGAGCCAGTC | |
| 15 | G6PC-2inF | Intron2–3 | AAGTTGGGACAAGGGAATCAGA |
| 16 | G6PC-2inR | CATTCTTAATTCCTCTACCCTGAGA | |
| 17 | G6PC-4QF | Exon4 | GCTGAAGGATCTGCACCTGT |
| 18 | G6PC-4QR | AGGGAGTCAGATCAGCCCAT | |
| 19 | G6PC-5QF | Exon5 | CAGCTTCGCCATCGGATTTT |
| 20 | G6PC-5QR | ACAATAGAGCTGAGGCGGAA | |
| 21 | G6PC-D1F | GTGGGGAAAATGCCTGAGGA | |
| 22 | G6PC-D2F | TTTTCACCCTTGGGAGCCTG | |
| 23 | G6PC-D3F | GGTCACCCTGTCCCACTAGA | |
| 24 | G6PC-D4F | CTCACCTGTTTTCCCACGGA | |
| 25 | G6PC-D5F | GGGAGGAGACTCCAGGTCAT | |
| 26 | G6PC-comR | Intron2–3 | CTTTCCAGTCTGTGCCTCCAT |
Fig. 1Clinical characteristics of the proband. (a) Pedigree of the family. III:3 represents the proband, whose older brother (III:2) has decreased. (b) The clinical features include a rounded doll’s face, fatty cheeks and protuberant abdomen. (c) X-ray films of the whole body of the patient. White arrows mark areas with obvious osteoporosis. (d) Focused view of X-ray film on the hand of the proband, where the wrist marked by white arrows has obvious osteoporosis. (e) Image of type-B ultrasonic on the proband shows severe liver enlargement. Blue color: The blood flow away from the detector of ultrasound B-mode scanner; Red color: The blood flow to the detector of ultrasound B-mode scanner
Fig. 2Identification of a c.326G > A missense mutation in the G6PC gene. (a) Whole-exome sequencing identified a homozygous c.326G > A missense variant in exon 2 of the G6PC gene. (b) The amino acid 109 (marked by red color) affected by c.326G > A is highly conserved across different species. (c) Sanger sequencing on the pedigree showed that the father does not carry the c.326G > A missense variant and that the mother carries a heterozygous c.326G > A missense variant
Fig. 3Long-read sequencing identified a deletion in the G6PC gene. (a) IGV screen shot of reads at the G6PC locus. Four reads carry a deletion (chr17 g.41049904_41057049del7125 that starts from the first intron of the LINC00671 gene to intron 2 of the G6PC gene. (b) Quantitative PCR validation of the deletion in the trio. Relative quantitation (RQ) of copy number was analyzed by the ΔΔCT method, and error bars represent standard deviation. The deletion includes exon 1F (5′-Flanking introns), exon 1 and exon 2, and the patient and his father are mutation carriers while his mother is normal. (c) Sanger validation of the deletion breakpoints. The first sequence shows the mutated genomic segment, while the second and third sequences show expected genomic segments if deletion is not present. The red arrow refers to the breakpoint, and a 7125 bp sequence is deleted based on the human reference genome (GRCh37). (d) Depiction of the protein domains that were targeted by the non-synonymous mutation and the 7.1 kb deletion. (e) Illustration of the genomic contexts of the two breakpoints, which are both located in known Alu elements. (f) Gel electrophoresis of the PCR product designed to detect the deletion. The lane marked with M represent GeneRuler 50 bp DNA Ladder (Thermo Scientific™), and all lanes (except “-“lane) include an ~ 800 bp internal control (β-Globin gene). A 418 bp fragment can be amplified from the father and the proband