| Literature DB >> 36140835 |
Steven Pastor1, Oanh Tran2, Daniel E McGinn2,3, T Blaine Crowley2, Elaine H Zackai2,3, Donna M McDonald-McGinn2,3, Beverly S Emanuel2,3.
Abstract
The most prevalent microdeletion in the human population occurs at 22q11.2, a region rich in chromosome-specific low copy repeats (LCR22s). The structure of this region has eluded characterization due to a combination of size, regional complexity, and haplotype diversity. To further complicate matters, it is not well represented in the human reference genome. Most individuals with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22q11.2DS) carry a de novo, hemizygous deletion approximately 3 Mbp in size occurring by non-allelic homologous recombination (NAHR) mediated by the LCR22s. The ability to fully delineate an individual's 22q11.2 regional structure will likely be important for studies designed to assess an unaffected individual's risk for generating rearrangements in germ cells, potentially leading to offspring with 22q11.2DS. Towards understanding these risk factors, optical mapping has been previously employed to successfully elucidate the structure and variation of LCR22s across 30 families affected by 22q11.2DS. The father in one of these families carries a t(11;22)(q23;q11) translocation. Surprisingly, it was determined that he is the parent-of-deletion-origin. NAHR, which occurred between his der(22) and intact chromosome 22, led to a 22q11.2 deletion in his affected child. The unaffected sibling of the proband with 22q11.2DS inherited the father's normal chromosome 22, which did not aberrantly recombine. This unexpected observation definitively shows that haplotypes that engage in NAHR can also be inherited intact. This study is the first to identify all structures involving a rearranged chromosome 22 that also participates in NAHR leading to a 22q11.2 deletion.Entities:
Keywords: 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome; microdeletion; optical mapping; recombination; structural variation
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36140835 PMCID: PMC9498844 DOI: 10.3390/genes13091668
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.141
Figure 1Reciprocal chromosome 11;22 translocation. Top: Bionano optical mapping structural variant caller detected the translocation (red line). Bottom: The same assembled consensus map (#470, blue) mapped to both chromosome 22 (left, green) and chromosome 11 (right, green) hg38 reference maps. The segments of the consensus map that map to chromosome 11 or chromosome 22 do not map to any other loci in the genome. Single DNA molecules (yellow) support the breakpoint of the translocation. This validated that this consensus map was that of the der(22). Blue labels indicate matches and red labels indicated mismatches.
Figure 2Simplified depiction of the haplotype maps in the family. The father contains 3 homologs of interest; the intact chromosome 22 homolog with no recombination events, the der(11) homolog, and the der(22) homolog. The der(11) and der(22) homologs contain reciprocal translocation breakpoints in LCR22B. The proband contains 2 homologs of interest with the deletion-containing haplotype inherited from the NAHR event in the father. Finally, the mother and unaffected sibling’s haplotypes are shown to the right. Green maps indicate inheritance from the father and yellow maps indicate inheritance from the mother. The red arrows indicate 160 kbp modules, whereas the pink arrows indicate the putative LCR22D flanking inversion when facing to the left. Dashed lines indicate connection between the respective 22q11.2 region and flanking chromosome 11 regions indicated in the text in the figure. The green dashed lines in the father indicate no inheritance in either offspring and how chromosome 11 from homolog #3 is deleted in the 22q11.2DS proband.
Figure 3NAHR event in the father leading to 22q11.2 deletion in proband. The 3′-most 160 kbp module in LCR22A of the der(22) homolog #3 from the father recombines with the 160 kbp module in the typical chromosome 22 homolog #1′s LCR22D region. Red boxes indicate 160 kbp modules. The flanking inversion is present in pink in both the father’s LCR22D and the proband’s deletion-containing haplotype, signifying the validated LCR22D portion. LCR22A in the deletion-containing haplotype is confirmed up to the second of the 5′ 5 labels in LCR22A (green box). This is validated, since the father’s LCR22A contains 5 labels and the proband’s haplotype does as well, whereas the father’s LCR22D contains only 4 labels at the same locus. Likewise, LCR22D (purple box) begins where LCR22D contains 4 labels, since that is shared in the proband’s deletion-containing map but not in the father’s LCR22A map, signifying inheritance of the 4 labels from LCR22D. The mustard box signifies ambiguity, as map labels could not determine LCR22A or LCR22D at this ~90 kbp locus. The reciprocal translocation is identified at the right of the der(22) homolog and the dashed line signifies that it is downstream of LCR22A in LCR22B.
Figure 4Quadrivalent that undergoes NAHR between the der(22) homolog and the intact chromosome 22 homolog. In meiosis, the homologous regions of the rearranged chromosomes align and recombine in the synaptonemal complex. The aberrant recombination event (NAHR) occurs between the der22 (top-right) and the intact chromosome 22 (bottom-right). The translocation is not present in the proband’s deletion-containing haplotype, since it is localized within LCR22B, and NAHR took place between LCR22A of the der(22) and LCR22D of the intact chromosome 22.