| Literature DB >> 34429528 |
Zerin Hyder1,2, Eduardo Calpena3, Yang Pei3, Rebecca S Tooze3, Helen Brittain1,4, Stephen R F Twigg3, Deirdre Cilliers5, Jenny E V Morton4, Emma McCann6, Astrid Weber6, Louise C Wilson7, Andrew G L Douglas8,9, Ruth McGowan10, Anna Need1, Andrew Bond1, Ana Lisa Taylor Tavares1, Ellen R A Thomas1,11, Susan L Hill12, Zandra C Deans12, Freya Boardman-Pretty1, Mark Caulfield1,13, Richard H Scott14,15, Andrew O M Wilkie16,17.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Genome sequencing (GS) for diagnosis of rare genetic disease is being introduced into the clinic, but the complexity of the data poses challenges for developing pipelines with high diagnostic sensitivity. We evaluated the performance of the Genomics England 100,000 Genomes Project (100kGP) panel-based pipelines, using craniosynostosis as a test disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34429528 PMCID: PMC8629760 DOI: 10.1038/s41436-021-01297-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Med ISSN: 1098-3600 Impact factor: 8.822
Fig. 1Summary of craniosynostosis (CRS) cases and outcomes.
One hundred twenty-seven cases with CRS were identified from the Clinical Variant Ark search, reduced to 114 after exclusion of participants recruited to the 100kGP Pilot project, and participants with no definite CRS-related phenotype terms. Potentially diagnostic variants have been identified in 36 cases thus far. Seventy-eight remaining cases have either been closed with no primary findings (n = 75) or are awaiting Genomic Medicine Centre (GMC) review (n = 3).
Researcher-identified potential diagnoses (RIPDs) submitted by Clinical Genetics Group, Oxford (CGG) for patients with craniosynostosis (CRS) recruited to the 100,000 Genomes Project (100kGP)a.
| Case | Researcher category (Box | Panels applied in addition to CRS | Gene | cDNA change | Protein change | Tier | Exomiser rank | Inheritance | Gene green on original/updated panel? | Pathogenicity | Also identified by GE/GMC? | Currently identifiable by NHSE pipeline? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | N/A | 5 | c.[1830+1G>C];[2248C>T] | p.([?]); ([Arg750Trp]) | Tier 1; tier 2 | 2 | Recessive | Original | Pathogenic | Y | Y | |
| 2 | N/A | 10 | 3.4 Mb Chr 6 del | − | − | Tier A | Unranked | De novo | Original | Pathogenic | Y | Y |
| 3 | N/A | 0 | c.557T>A | p.(Leu186*) | Tier 3 | 1 | De novo | No | Pathogenic | Y | Y | |
| 4 | 2A | 1 | c.1223T>C | p.(Leu408Pro) | Tier 3 | 2 | De novo | No | VUS | N/A | N/A | |
| 5 | 2A | 0 | c.40T>C | p.(Trp14Arg) | Tier 3 | 1 | De novo | Updated | Likely pathogenic | N | Y | |
| 6 | 2A | 0 | c.2563G>C | p.(Asp855His) | Tier 3 | 2 | De novo | No | Likely pathogenic | N | Y | |
| 7 | 2A | 7 | c.1291G>T | p.(Glu431*) | Tier 3 | 1 | De novo | Updated | Pathogenic | N | Y | |
| 8 | 2A | 1 | c.2731_2732insGACA | p.(Thr911Argfs*5) | Tier 3 | 3 | De novo | Updated | Likely pathogenic | N | Y | |
| 9 | 4A | 1 | c.242C>G | p.(Ser81*) | Tier 3 | 2 | De novo | No | Pathogenic | N | Y | |
| 10 | 4C | 1 | c.277C>T | p.(Arg93*) | Tier 3 | 63 | Parents not available | No | Likely Pathogenic | N | N | |
| 11 | 2A | 0 | c.4012C>T | p.(Gln1338*) | Tier 3 | 1 | De novo | No | Pathogenic | N | Y | |
| 12 | 2A | 1 | c.290del | p.(Asn97Thrfs*20) | Tier 3 | 1 | De novo | No | Pathogenic | N | Y | |
| 13 | 2A | 1 | c.541C>A | p.(Gln181Lys) | Tier 3 | 5 | De novo | No | VUS | N/A | N/A | |
| 14 | 1B; 1B | 1 | c.[4496G>A];[7766_7768del] | p.([Arg1499His]); ([Phe2589del]) | Both untiered | 96; unranked | Compound heterozygous | Original | Likely pathogenic/likely pathogenic | N | N | |
| 15 | 1B; 1B | 3 | c.[671_684del];[775C>G] | p.([Val224Glyfs*29]); ([His259Asp]) | Untiered; tier 3 | Both unranked | Compound heterozygous | Original | Pathogenic/likely pathogenic | N | Y | |
| 16 | 1A | 1 | c.3594delinsCCCCCA | p.(Gly1199Profs*14) | Untiered | Unranked | De novo | Original | Pathogenic | N | Y | |
| 17 | 2A | 1 | c.1885A>G | p.(Ser629Gly) | Untiered | 3 | De novo | Updated | Likely pathogenic | N | Y | |
| 18 | 1E | 1 | c.1870C>T | p.(Leu624Phe) | Untiered | Unranked | De novo | Original | Pathogenic | N | Y | |
| 19 | N/A | 3 | c.539A>G | p.(Tyr180Cys) | Untiered | 1 | De novo | Updated | Pathogenic | Y | Y | |
| 20 | 3D | 0 | 13.4 Mb Chr 7 inv ( | − | − | Untiered | Unranked | Dominant (proband, affected mother) | Original | Pathogenic | N | N |
| 21 | 3A | 1 | 314 kb Chr 19 del ( | − | − | Untiered | Unranked | De novo (mosaic in unaffected father) | Original | Pathogenic | N | Y |
| 22 | 3D | 2 | 285 kb Chr 12 dup | − | − | Untiered | Unranked | Dominant (mosaic in affected father) | No | Likely pathogenic | N | N |
cDNA complementary DNA, GE/GMC Genomics England/Genomic Medicine Centre, N/A not applicable, NHSE NHS England, VUS variant of uncertain significance.
aFor a more detailed version of the content of this table, please see Table S4.
Fig. 2Improved approaches to identifying diagnostic variants in craniosynostosis.
Venn diagram classifying each of 16 researcher-identified potential diagnoses (RIPDs) considered diagnostic (excluding variants of uncertain significance [VUS], and those independently found by Genomic Medicine Centres [GMCs]) and 2 additional cases, according to methods that would have identified them.
| Number of RIPD alleles in tier | |
|---|---|
| 1a | |
| 1a | |
| 12 | |
| 1 | |
| 10b |
aThe biallelic variants in MAN2B1 comprised one classified as tier 1 and one as tier 2.
bBoth MEGF8 alleles were untiered.
|
|
| Number of RIPD alleles in category |
| 1 | Single-nucleotide variants (SNVs)/indels in PanelApp genes that had been missed or filtered out by the variant caller | 6b |
| 2 | Variants in known developmental genes not rated green in the PanelApp for craniosynostosis (CRS) (± additional panels applied), at the time of the GMC’s analysis. To broaden the search space we scrutinized genes listed in G2PDD 29 and/or prioritized by Exomiser [ | 7 |
| 3 | Copy-number variants (CNVs) or structural variants (SVs) annotated using one or both of the callers applied to the GEL data, i.e., Canvas (CNV) and Manta (CNV/SV) | 3 |
| 4 | Genes for which apparently pathogenic variants of a particular class were present in two or more unrelated individuals, whereas variants with similar predicted pathogenic effect were rare in gnomAD (classified as | 2 |
|
| ||
| A | Sporadic case associated with de novo mutation (DNM) in the proband | 10c |
| B | Sporadic case with autosomal recessive (homozygous or compound heterozygous) inheritance | 4 |
| C | Ultrarare pathogenic variant in a singleton | 1 |
| D | Affected parent and child with concordant segregation of ultrarare genotype (dominant inheritance) | 2d |
| E | Incorrect disease segregation model applied, owing to phenocopies or nonpenetrance | 1 |
aClinical Genetics Group, Oxford (CGG) researchers considered additional segregation (for example, affected sib pairs arising from biparental [autosomal recessive] inheritance or parental gonadal mosaicism for a DNM) and pathogenic molecular mechanisms (for example, cryptic splicing abnormalities), but if no convincing pathogenic example was found, no number category is assigned here.
bThe missense allele in MMP21 was detected, but only assigned to tier 3 because the other allele was filtered out.
cThe ERF deletion was present in mosaic state in the unaffected father.
dThe HOXC duplication was present in mosaic state in the affected father.