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Transcriptome-directed analysis for Mendelian disease diagnosis overcomes limitations of conventional genomic testing
David R. Murdock, … , Undiagnosed Diseases Network, Brendan Lee
David R. Murdock, … , Undiagnosed Diseases Network, Brendan Lee
Published October 1, 2020
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2021;131(1):e141500. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI141500.
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Clinical Research and Public Health Genetics

Transcriptome-directed analysis for Mendelian disease diagnosis overcomes limitations of conventional genomic testing

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Abstract

BACKGROUND Transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq) improves diagnostic rates in individuals with suspected Mendelian conditions to varying degrees, primarily by directing the prioritization of candidate DNA variants identified on exome or genome sequencing (ES/GS). Here we implemented an RNA-seq–guided method to diagnose individuals across a wide range of ages and clinical phenotypes.METHODS One hundred fifteen undiagnosed adult and pediatric patients with diverse phenotypes and 67 family members (182 total individuals) underwent RNA-seq from whole blood and skin fibroblasts at the Baylor College of Medicine (BCM) Undiagnosed Diseases Network clinical site from 2014 to 2020. We implemented a workflow to detect outliers in gene expression and splicing for cases that remained undiagnosed despite standard genomic and transcriptomic analysis.RESULTS The transcriptome-directed approach resulted in a diagnostic rate of 12% across the entire cohort, or 17% after excluding cases solved on ES/GS alone. Newly diagnosed conditions included Koolen–de Vries syndrome (KANSL1), Renpenning syndrome (PQBP1), TBCK-associated encephalopathy, NSD2- and CLTC-related intellectual disability, and others, all with negative conventional genomic testing, including ES and chromosomal microarray (CMA). Skin fibroblasts exhibited higher and more consistent expression of clinically relevant genes than whole blood. In solved cases with RNA-seq from both tissues, the causative defect was missed in blood in half the cases but none from fibroblasts.CONCLUSIONS For our cohort of undiagnosed individuals with suspected Mendelian conditions, transcriptome-directed genomic analysis facilitated diagnoses, primarily through the identification of variants missed on ES and CMA.TRIAL REGISTRATION Not applicable.FUNDING NIH Common Fund, BCM Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development.

Authors

David R. Murdock, Hongzheng Dai, Lindsay C. Burrage, Jill A. Rosenfeld, Shamika Ketkar, Michaela F. Müller, Vicente A. Yépez, Julien Gagneur, Pengfei Liu, Shan Chen, Mahim Jain, Gladys Zapata, Carlos A. Bacino, Hsiao-Tuan Chao, Paolo Moretti, William J. Craigen, Neil A. Hanchard, Undiagnosed Diseases Network, Brendan Lee

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Figure 3

Causative genomic variants identified through RNA-seq–directed genomic analysis.

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Causative genomic variants identified through RNA-seq–directed genomic a...
Variant types included synonymous (n = 1), near intronic (3–50 bp from canonical exon boundary, n = 2), deep intronic (>50 bp away from canonical exon boundary, n = 4), promoter (n = 1), and canonical splice site SNVs (n = 1) as well as both coding (n = 3) and noncoding (n = 2) deletion CNVs. SNV, single-nucleotide variant; CNV, copy number variant.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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