Exome Sequence Analysis Suggests that Genetic Burden Contributes to Phenotypic Variability and Complex Neuropathy
Date
2015Author
WITHERS, Marjorie
HAREL, Tamar
GAMBIN, Tomasz
Kousi, Maria
GRIFFIN, Laurie B.
Francescatto, Ludmila
Ozes, Burcak
JHANGIANI, Shalini N.
BAINBRIDGE, Matthew N.
LAWSON, Kim S.
OKAMOTO, Yuji
MANCIAS, Pedro
SLAVOTINEK, Anne
REITNAUER, Pamela J.
Shy, Michael
Crawford, Thomas O.
KOENIG, Michel
Willer, Jason
FLORES, Brittany N.
Pediaditrakis, Igor
US, Onder
WISZNIEWSKI, Wojciech
ANTONELLIS, Anthony
MUZNY, Donna M.
Katsanis, Nicholas
Battaloglu, Esra
BOERWINKLE, Eric
GIBBS, Richard A.
LUPSKI, James R.
Goksungur, Meryem T.
Pehlivan, Davut
Parman, Yesim
KARACA, Ender
GONZAGA-JAUREGUI, Claudia
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous distal symmetric polyneuropathy. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) of 40 individuals from 37 unrelated families with CMT-like peripheral neuropathy refractory to molecular diagnosis identified apparent causal mutations in similar to 45% (17/37) of families. Three candidate disease genes are proposed, supported by a combination of genetic and in vivo studies. Aggregate analysis of mutation data revealed a significantly increased number of rare variants across 58 neuropathy-associated genes in subjects versus controls, confirmed in a second ethnically discrete neuropathy cohort, suggesting that mutation burden potentially contributes to phenotypic variability. Neuropathy genes shown to have highly penetrant Mendelizing variants (HPMVs) and implicated by burden in families were shown to interact genetically in a zebrafish assay exacerbating the phenotype established by the suppression of single genes. Our findings suggest that the combinatorial effect of rare variants contributes to disease burden and variable expressivity.
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