| Literature DB >> 33169370 |
Clarisse Delvallée1, Samuel Nicaise1, Manuela Antin2, Anne-Sophie Leuvrey2, Elsa Nourisson2, Carmen C Leitch3, Georgios Kellaris3, Corinne Stoetzel1, Véronique Geoffroy1, Sophie Scheidecker1,2, Boris Keren4,5, Christel Depienne4,6, Joakim Klar7, Niklas Dahl7, Jean-François Deleuze8, Emmanuelle Génin9, Richard Redon10, Florence Demurger11, Koenraad Devriendt12, Michèle Mathieu-Dramard13, Christine Poitou-Bernert14, Sylvie Odent15,16, Nicholas Katsanis3,17, Jean-Louis Mandel2,18, Erica E Davis3,17, Hélène Dollfus1,19,20, Jean Muller1,2.
Abstract
Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is a ciliopathy characterized by retinitis pigmentosa, obesity, polydactyly, cognitive impairment and renal failure. Pathogenic variants in 24 genes account for the molecular basis of >80% of cases. Toward saturated discovery of the mutational basis of the disorder, we carefully explored our cohorts and identified a hominid-specific SINE-R/VNTR/Alu type F (SVA-F) insertion in exon 13 of BBS1 in eight families. In six families, the repeat insertion was found in trans with c.1169 T > G, p.Met390Arg and in two families the insertion was found in addition to other recessive BBS loci. Whole genome sequencing, de novo assembly and SNP array analysis were performed to characterize the genomic event. This insertion is extremely rare in the general population (found in 8 alleles of 8 BBS cases but not in >10 800 control individuals from gnomAD-SV) and due to a founder effect. Its 2435 bp sequence contains hallmarks of LINE1 mediated retrotransposition. Functional studies with patient-derived cell lines confirmed that the BBS1 SVA-F is deleterious as evidenced by a significant depletion of both mRNA and protein levels. Such findings highlight the importance of dedicated bioinformatics pipelines to identify all types of variation.Entities:
Keywords: BBS1; Bardet-Biedl syndrome; Mobile element insertion; SVA F; founder effect
Year: 2020 PMID: 33169370 PMCID: PMC8253169 DOI: 10.1111/cge.13878
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Genet ISSN: 0009-9163 Impact factor: 4.438