| Literature DB >> 32884827 |
Natalie Deuitch1,2, Shao-Tzu Li1, Eliza Courtney1, Tarryn Shaw1, Rebecca Dent3, Veronique Tan4, Lauren Yackowski5, Rebecca Torene5, Windy Berkofsky-Fessler5, Joanne Ngeow1,6.
Abstract
Mobile element insertions (MEIs) contribute to genomic diversity, but they can be responsible for human disease in some cases. Initial clinical testing (BRCA1, BRCA2 and PALB2) in a 40-year-old female with unilateral breast cancer did not detect any pathogenic variants. Subsequent reanalysis for MEIs detected a novel likely pathogenic insertion of the retrotransposon element (RE) c.7894_7895insSVA in BRCA2. This case highlights the importance of bioinformatic pipeline optimization for the detection of MEIs in genes associated with hereditary cancer, as early detection can significantly impact clinical management.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer genomics; Next-generation sequencing
Year: 2020 PMID: 32884827 PMCID: PMC7447638 DOI: 10.1038/s41439-020-00111-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genome Var ISSN: 2054-345X
Fig. 1The patient’s pedigree reveals no known family history of hereditary breast, ovarian, or other related cancers.
The proband is the only child to her parents; however, she has three half-siblings through her mother and numerous aunts, uncles, and cousins on both sides of the family. While this suggests that the MEI is de novo in the proband, it is possible that some members of the family may have the variant and have simply not developed cancer due to age-related penetrance. Her grandparents are reported to have died of noncancer-related causes in their 60s and 70s, and it is possible that they died before cancer would have developed. Only sequencing of family members could confirm the de novo status of the BRCA2 MEI; however, samples were not available.
Fig. 2Molecular detection of the pathogenic MEI.
a An IGV image from the proband. Colored bases indicate a mismatch relative to the reference genome. Strings of colored bases in a row indicate clipped reads at the SVA insertion breakpoint. The sequence on the bottom represents the reference genome. b Clipped reads at the insertion breakpoint were used to infer the structure of the SVA. A consensus sequence was built from both the right- and left-clipped read clusters. The right-clipped consensus represents the 5′ sequence of the SVA and demonstrates some 5′ truncation relative to an SVA-E sequence. The left-clipped consensus represents the poly-A tail of the sequence. The box labeled “presumed 3′ SVA” is not sequenced and not drawn to scale. If there are no additional rearrangements within the SVA sequence, then the nonsequenced portion is likely ~2kb long. A primer designed based on the SINE-R region of known SVA-E elements was used to amplify the 3′ insertion breakpoint.