17 research outputs found

    Etude des déterminants génétiques des psychoses à début précoce. Génétique de la schizophrénie et hypothèse glutamatergique

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    Les troubles schizophréniques (SCZ) ont une forte héritabilité, de l’ordre de 80%, mais, une très faible part du risque génétique a été identifiée. La plupart des études ont considéré l’implication de polymorphismes fréquents, chacun ayant un effet relativement faible individuellement, alors que les études de variants du nombre de copies (CNVs) ainsi que les études d’anomalies chromosomiques ont pointé l’implication possible de variants rares et de novo à une forte pénétrance. Dans une première partie, nous présentons une synthèse sur les facteurs génétiques dans la SCZ, puis une revue des arguments en faveur de l’implication d’anomalies du système glutamatergique dans la SCZ, domaine sur lequel s’est centré notre travail. Notre travail s’inscrit dans un projet plus vaste, Synapse to Disease (S2D) ayant pour objectif de séquencer 1000 gènes synaptiques dans des cohortes de patients atteints de schizophrénie ou de troubles du spectre autistique. Nous avons exploré en particulier le système glutamatergique et les récepteurs NMDA. Dans un premier article, nous montrons une association d’une mutation troncante de novo de la kinésine 17, impliquée dans le transport de la sous-unité GRIN2B des récepteurs NMDA. Dans un second article, nous explorons les mutations rares et de novo dans les sous-unités des récepteurs NMDA et montrons l’association de mutation de novo dans GRIN2A et GRIN2B avec des cas de SCZ et d’autisme. Nos résultats renforcent l’idée qu’une part des cas de schizophrénie pourrait être due à l’implication de mutations rare à effet majeur, hypothèse alternative mais non exclusive à l’hypothèse d’interactions entre variants génétiques fréquents à effet mineur.Schizophrenic disorders (SCZ) have high heritability (around 80%), but only a small part has been characterized. Most studies have focussed on common polymorphisms, each having small individual effect, whereas copy number variant and chromosomal abnormalities studies have pointed to the possible involvement of rare and de novo mutations with high penetrance. In the first part of this manuscript, we will present a synthesis on genetic factors of SCZ and then a review of the arguments supporting an involvement of glutamatergic system abnormalities in SCZ, which is the focus of our research. Our work is part of a global project, Synapse to Disease (S2D), that aimed to sequence 1000 synaptic genes in cohort of patients affected with schizophrenia or autism spectrum disorders. We focussed in particular on the glutamatergic system and NMDA receptors. In a first publication we show an association between SCZ and a de novo truncating mutation of kinesin 17, wich has been implicated in the transport of the GRIN2B subunit of NMDA receptors. In a second publication we explore rare and de novo mutations in NMDA receptor subunits. We show an association between de novo mutations in GRIN2A and GRIN2B with cases of SCZ and autism. Our results strengthen the idea that a portion of schizophrenia cases could be related to rare mutations having a high penetrance, an alternative but not contradictory explanation to the hypothesis for an interaction between common variants having a small effect

    Mosaicism and prenatal diagnosis options: insights from retinoblastoma

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    International audienceIn sporadic cases, a post-zygotic mutational event signifies a somatic mosaicism in the affected child only, which implies that these mutations affect only a portion of the body. Therefore siblings do not need follow-up. On the other hand, a pre-zygotic mutation transmitted by an unaffected mosaic parent implies recurrent risks in offspring. To better estimate the contribution of pre- and post-zygotic events, we analysed 124 consecutive bilateral retinoblastoma probands, carrying a heterozygous RB1 pathogenic variant and their unaffected, non-carrier parents. In order to evaluate somatic mosaicism in blood, the deleterious RB1 pathogenic variant identified in the proband, was searched for in the unaffected parents, using targeted deep sequencing. Observed recurrences, which represent an estimation of germline and somatic mosaicisms, were recorded and computed in the sibships. Deep sequencing revealed one mosaic-unaffected parent out of 124 tested couples, which provides an estimation of the maximal risk of recurrence, due to parental mosaicism, at 0.4%. Follow-up in the sibships showed one recurrence, providing a maximal recurrence risk, due to parental mosaicism, at 0.8%. Two different statistical strategies led to close estimates (0.4 and 0.8% risks) which appeared 266-533-fold higher, as compared with the general population. These recurrence estimates could be considered when counselling couples with retinoblastoma or diseases with a high de novo mutation rate

    Protocol GenoDENT: Implementation of a New NGS Panel for Molecular Diagnosis of Genetic Disorders with Orodental Involvement.

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    Rare genetic disorders are often challenging to diagnose. Anomalies of tooth number, shape, size, mineralized tissue structure, eruption, and resorption may exist as isolated symptoms or diseases but are often part of the clinical synopsis of numerous syndromes (Bloch-Zupan A, Sedano H, Scully C. Dento/oro/craniofacial anomalies and genetics, 1st edn. Elsevier, Boston, MA, 2012). Concerning amelogenesis imperfecta (AI), for example, mutations in a number of genes have been reported to cause isolated AI, including AMELX, ENAM, KLK4, MMP20, FAM83H, WDR72, C4orf26, SLC24A4, and LAMB3. In addition, many other genes such as DLX3, CNNM4, ROGDI, FAM20A, STIM1, ORAI1, and LTBP3 have been shown to be involved in developmental syndromes with enamel defects. The clinical presentation of the enamel phenotype (hypoplastic, hypomineralized, hypomature, or a combination of severities) alone does not allow a reliable prediction of possible causative genetic mutations. Understanding the potential genetic cause(s) of rare diseases is critical for overall health management of affected patient. One effective strategy to reach a genetic diagnosis is to sequence a selected gene panel chosen for a determined range of phenotypes. Here we describe a laboratory protocol to set up a specific gene panel for orodental diseases

    Assessment of a Targeted Gene Panel for Identification of Genes Associated With Movement Disorders

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    International audienceImportance: Movement disorders are characterized by a marked genotypic and phenotypic heterogeneity, complicating diagnostic work in clinical practice and molecular diagnosis. Objective: To develop and evaluate a targeted sequencing approach using a customized panel of genes involved in movement disorders. Design, Setting and Participants: We selected 127 genes associated with movement disorders to create a customized enrichment in solution capture array. Targeted high-coverage sequencing was applied to DNA samples taken from 378 eligible patients at 1 Luxembourgian, 1 Algerian, and 25 French tertiary movement disorder centers between September 2014 and July 2016. Patients were suspected of having inherited movement disorders because of early onset, family history, and/or complex phenotypes. They were divided in 5 main movement disorder groups: parkinsonism, dystonia, chorea, paroxysmal movement disorder, and myoclonus. To compare approaches, 23 additional patients suspected of having inherited cerebellar ataxia were included, on whom whole-exome sequencing (WES) was done. Data analysis occurred from November 2015 to October 2016. Main Outcomes and Measures: Percentages of individuals with positive diagnosis, variants of unknown significance, and negative cases; mutational frequencies and clinical phenotyping of genes associated with movement disorders. Results: Of the 378 patients (of whom 208 were male [55.0%]), and with a median (range) age at disease onset of 31 (0-84) years, probable pathogenic variants were identified in 83 cases (22.0%): 46 patients with parkinsonism (55% of 83 patients), 21 patients (25.3%) with dystonia, 7 patients (8.4%) with chorea, 7 patients (8.4%) with paroxysmal movement disorders, and 2 patients (2.4%) with myoclonus as the predominant phenotype. Some genes were mutated in several cases in the cohort. Patients with pathogenic variants were significantly younger (median age, 27 years; interquartile range [IQR], 5-36 years]) than the patients without diagnosis (median age, 35 years; IQR, 15-46 years; P = .04). Diagnostic yield was significantly lower in patients with dystonia (21 of 135; 15.6%; P = .03) than in the overall cohort. Unexpected genotype-phenotype correlations in patients with pathogenic variants deviating from the classic phenotype were highlighted, and 49 novel probable pathogenic variants were identified. The WES analysis of the cohort of 23 patients with cerebellar ataxia led to an overall diagnostic yield of 26%, similar to panel analysis but at a cost 6 to 7 times greater. Conclusions and Relevance: High-coverage sequencing panel for the delineation of genes associated with movement disorders was efficient and provided a cost-effective diagnostic alternative to whole-exome and whole-genome sequencing

    WGS Revealed Novel BBS5 Pathogenic Variants, Missed by WES, Causing Ciliary Structure and Function Defects

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    Bardet–Biedl syndrome (BBS) is an autosomal recessive ciliopathy that affects multiple organs, leading to retinitis pigmentosa, polydactyly, obesity, renal anomalies, cognitive impairment, and hypogonadism. Until now, biallelic pathogenic variants have been identified in at least 24 genes delineating the genetic heterogeneity of BBS. Among those, BBS5 is a minor contributor to the mutation load and is one of the eight subunits forming the BBSome, a protein complex implied in protein trafficking within the cilia. This study reports on a European BBS5 patient with a severe BBS phenotype. Genetic analysis was performed using multiple next-generation sequencing (NGS) tests (targeted exome, TES and whole exome, WES), and biallelic pathogenic variants could only be identified using whole-genome sequencing (WGS), including a previously missed large deletion of the first exons. Despite the absence of family samples, the biallelic status of the variants was confirmed. The BBS5 protein’s impact was confirmed on the patient’s cells (presence/absence and size of the cilium) and ciliary function (Sonic Hedgehog pathway). This study highlights the importance of WGS and the challenge of reliable structural variant detection in patients’ genetic explorations as well as functional tests to assess a variant’s pathogenicity

    Pros and cons of HaloPlex enrichment in cancer predisposition genetic diagnosis

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    Panel sequencing is a practical option in genetic diagnosis. Enrichment and library preparation steps are critical in the diagnostic setting. In order to test the value of HaloPlex technology in diagnosis, we designed a custom oncogenetic panel including 62 genes. The procedure was tested on a training set of 71 controls and then blindly validated on 48 consecutive hereditary breast/ovarian cancer (HBOC) patients tested negative for BRCA1/2 mutation. Libraries were sequenced on HiSeq2500 and data were analysed with our academic bioinformatics pipeline. Point mutations were detected using Varscan2, median size indels were detected using Pindel and large genomic rearrangements (LGR) were detected by DESeq. Proper coverage was obtained. However, highly variable read depth was observed within genes. Excluding pseudogene analysis, all point mutations were detected on the training set. All indels were also detected using Pindel. On the other hand, DESeq allowed LGR detection but with poor specificity, preventing its use in diagnostics. Mutations were detected in 8% of BRCA1/2-negative HBOC cases. HaloPlex technology appears to be an efficient and promising solution for gene panel diagnostics. Data analysis remains a major challenge and geneticists should enhance their bioinformatics knowledge in order to ensure good quality diagnostic results

    ARTICLE Direct Measure of the De Novo Mutation Rate in Autism and Schizophrenia Cohorts

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    The role of de novo mutations (DNMs) in common diseases remains largely unknown. Nonetheless, the rate of de novo deleterious mutations and the strength of selection against de novo mutations are critical to understanding the genetic architecture of a disease. Discovery of high-impact DNMs requires substantial high-resolution interrogation of partial or complete genomes of families via resequencing. We hypothesized that deleterious DNMs may play a role in cases of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) and schizophrenia (SCZ), two etiologically heterogeneous disorders with significantly reduced reproductive fitness. We present a direct measure of the de novo mutation rate (m) and selective constraints from DNMs estimated from a deep resequencing data set generated from a large cohort of ASD and SCZ cases (n ¼ 285) and population control individuals (n ¼ 285) with available parental DNA. A survey of~430 Mb of DNA from 401 synapse-expressed genes across all cases and 25 Mb of DNA in controls found 28 candidate DNMs, 13 of which were cell line artifacts. Our calculated direct neutral mutation rate (1.36 3 10 À8 ) is similar to previous indirect estimates, but we observed a significant excess of potentially deleterious DNMs in ASD and SCZ individuals. Our results emphasize the importance of DNMs as genetic mechanisms in ASD and SCZ and the limitations of using DNA from archived cell lines to identify functional variants
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