| Literature DB >> 34216551 |
Danny E Miller1, Arvis Sulovari2, Tianyun Wang2, Hailey Loucks3, Kendra Hoekzema2, Katherine M Munson2, Alexandra P Lewis2, Edith P Almanza Fuerte3, Catherine R Paschal4, Tom Walsh5, Jenny Thies3, James T Bennett6, Ian Glass3, Katrina M Dipple7, Karynne Patterson2, Emily S Bonkowski3, Zoe Nelson3, Audrey Squire3, Megan Sikes3, Erika Beckman3, Robin L Bennett8, Dawn Earl3, Winston Lee9, Rando Allikmets10, Seth J Perlman11, Penny Chow12, Anne V Hing12, Tara L Wenger3, Margaret P Adam3, Angela Sun13, Christina Lam14, Irene Chang3, Xue Zou15, Stephanie L Austin16, Erin Huggins16, Alexias Safi16, Apoorva K Iyengar17, Timothy E Reddy18, William H Majoros18, Andrew S Allen18, Gregory E Crawford16, Priya S Kishnani16, Mary-Claire King5, Tim Cherry19, Jessica X Chong20, Michael J Bamshad21, Deborah A Nickerson22, Heather C Mefford20, Dan Doherty23, Evan E Eichler24.
Abstract
Despite widespread clinical genetic testing, many individuals with suspected genetic conditions lack a precise diagnosis, limiting their opportunity to take advantage of state-of-the-art treatments. In some cases, testing reveals difficult-to-evaluate structural differences, candidate variants that do not fully explain the phenotype, single pathogenic variants in recessive disorders, or no variants in genes of interest. Thus, there is a need for better tools to identify a precise genetic diagnosis in individuals when conventional testing approaches have been exhausted. We performed targeted long-read sequencing (T-LRS) using adaptive sampling on the Oxford Nanopore platform on 40 individuals, 10 of whom lacked a complete molecular diagnosis. We computationally targeted up to 151 Mbp of sequence per individual and searched for pathogenic substitutions, structural variants, and methylation differences using a single data source. We detected all genomic aberrations-including single-nucleotide variants, copy number changes, repeat expansions, and methylation differences-identified by prior clinical testing. In 8/8 individuals with complex structural rearrangements, T-LRS enabled more precise resolution of the mutation, leading to changes in clinical management in one case. In ten individuals with suspected Mendelian conditions lacking a precise genetic diagnosis, T-LRS identified pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants in six and variants of uncertain significance in two others. T-LRS accurately identifies pathogenic structural variants, resolves complex rearrangements, and identifies Mendelian variants not detected by other technologies. T-LRS represents an efficient and cost-effective strategy to evaluate high-priority genes and regions or complex clinical testing results.Entities:
Keywords: long-read sequencing, adaptive sampling, nanopore sequencing, targeted long-read sequencing
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34216551 PMCID: PMC8387463 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2021.06.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025