| Literature DB >> 31448840 |
Hadia Hijazi1, Fernanda S Coelho2,3, Claudia Gonzaga-Jauregui4, Laura Bernardini5, Soe S Mar6, Melanie A Manning7,8, Andrea Hanson-Kahn7,9, SakkuBai Naidu10,11, Siddharth Srivastava12, Jennifer A Lee13, Julie R Jones13, Michael J Friez13, Thomas Alberico14, Barbara Torres5, Ping Fang15, Sau Wai Cheung1, Xiaofei Song1, Angelique Davis-Williams14, Carly Jornlin14, Patricia A Wight16, Pankaj Patyal16, Jennifer Taube14, Andrea Poretti10, Ken Inoue17, Feng Zhang18, Davut Pehlivan1,19, Claudia M B Carvalho1, Grace M Hobson14, James R Lupski1,20,21,22.
Abstract
Xq22 deletions that encompass PLP1 (Xq22-PLP1-DEL) are notable for variable expressivity of neurological disease traits in females ranging from a mild late-onset form of spastic paraplegia type 2 (MIM# 312920), sometimes associated with skewed X-inactivation, to an early-onset neurological disease trait (EONDT) of severe developmental delay, intellectual disability, and behavioral abnormalities. Size and gene content of Xq22-PLP1-DEL vary and were proposed as potential molecular etiologies underlying variable expressivity in carrier females where two smallest regions of overlap (SROs) were suggested to influence disease. We ascertained a cohort of eight unrelated patients harboring Xq22-PLP1-DEL and performed high-density array comparative genomic hybridization and breakpoint-junction sequencing. Molecular characterization of Xq22-PLP1-DEL from 17 cases (eight herein and nine published) revealed an overrepresentation of breakpoints that reside within repeats (11/17, ~65%) and the clustering of ~47% of proximal breakpoints in a genomic instability hotspot with characteristic non-B DNA density. These findings implicate a potential role for genomic architecture in stimulating the formation of Xq22-PLP1-DEL. The correlation of Xq22-PLP1-DEL gene content with neurological disease trait in female cases enabled refinement of the associated SROs to a single genomic interval containing six genes. Our data support the hypothesis that genes contiguous to PLP1 contribute to EONDT.Entities:
Keywords: BEX3; PLP1; TCEAL1; contiguous gene deletion syndrome; intrachromosomal repeats; sex limited traits
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31448840 PMCID: PMC6953250 DOI: 10.1002/humu.23902
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.878