| Literature DB >> 36048237 |
Mariko Okubo1, Satoru Noguchi2, Tomonari Awaya3, Motoyasu Hosokawa3, Nobue Tsukui4, Megumu Ogawa1, Shinichiro Hayashi1, Hirofumi Komaki5, Madoka Mori-Yoshimura6, Yasushi Oya6, Yuji Takahashi6, Tetsuhiro Fukuyama7, Michinori Funato8, Yousuke Hosokawa9, Satoru Kinoshita10, Tsuyoshi Matsumura11, Sadao Nakamura12, Azusa Oshiro12, Hiroshi Terashima13, Tetsuro Nagasawa13, Tatsuharu Sato14, Yumi Shimada15, Yasuko Tokita16, Masatoshi Hagiwara3, Katsuhisa Ogata17, Ichizo Nishino1.
Abstract
Dystrophinopathy is caused by alterations in DMD. Approximately 1% of patients remain genetically undiagnosed, because intronic variations are not detected by standard methods. Here, we combined laboratory and in silico analyses to identify disease-causing genomic variants in genetically undiagnosed patients and determine the regulatory mechanisms underlying abnormal DMD transcript generation. DMD transcripts from 20 genetically undiagnosed dystrophinopathy patients in whom no exon variants were identified, despite dystrophin deficiency on muscle biopsy, were analyzed by transcriptome sequencing. Genome sequencing captured intronic variants and their effects were interpreted using in silico tools. Targeted long-read sequencing was applied in cases with suspected structural genomic abnormalities. Abnormal DMD transcripts were detected in 19 of 20 cases; Exonization of intronic sequences in 15 cases, exon skipping in one case, aberrantly spliced and polyadenylated transcripts in two cases and transcription termination in one case. Intronic single nucleotide variants, chromosomal rearrangements and nucleotide repeat expansion were identified in DMD gene as pathogenic causes of transcript alteration. Our combined analysis approach successfully identified pathogenic events. Detection of diseasing-causing mechanisms in DMD transcripts could inform the therapeutic options for patients with dystrophinopathy.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36048237 DOI: 10.1007/s00439-022-02485-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genet ISSN: 0340-6717 Impact factor: 5.881