Exome sequencing identifies MLL2 mutations as a cause of Kabuki syndrome

SB Ng, AW Bigham, KJ Buckingham, MC Hannibal… - Nature …, 2010 - nature.com
SB Ng, AW Bigham, KJ Buckingham, MC Hannibal, MJ McMillin, HI Gildersleeve, AE Beck…
Nature genetics, 2010nature.com
We demonstrate the successful application of exome sequencing,, to discover a gene for an
autosomal dominant disorder, Kabuki syndrome (OMIM% 147920). We subjected the
exomes of ten unrelated probands to massively parallel sequencing. After filtering against
existing SNP databases, there was no compelling candidate gene containing previously
unknown variants in all affected individuals. Less stringent filtering criteria allowed for the
presence of modest genetic heterogeneity or missing data but also identified multiple …
Abstract
We demonstrate the successful application of exome sequencing,, to discover a gene for an autosomal dominant disorder, Kabuki syndrome (OMIM%147920). We subjected the exomes of ten unrelated probands to massively parallel sequencing. After filtering against existing SNP databases, there was no compelling candidate gene containing previously unknown variants in all affected individuals. Less stringent filtering criteria allowed for the presence of modest genetic heterogeneity or missing data but also identified multiple candidate genes. However, genotypic and phenotypic stratification highlighted MLL2, which encodes a Trithorax-group histone methyltransferase: seven probands had newly identified nonsense or frameshift mutations in this gene. Follow-up Sanger sequencing detected MLL2 mutations in two of the three remaining individuals with Kabuki syndrome (cases) and in 26 of 43 additional cases. In families where parental DNA was available, the mutation was confirmed to be de novo (n = 12) or transmitted (n = 2) in concordance with phenotype. Our results strongly suggest that mutations in MLL2 are a major cause of Kabuki syndrome.
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