High‐throughput sequencing of a 4.1 Mb linkage interval reveals FLVCR2 deletions and mutations in lethal cerebral vasculopathy

S Thomas, F Encha‐Razavi, L Devisme… - Human …, 2010 - Wiley Online Library
S Thomas, F Encha‐Razavi, L Devisme, H Etchevers, B Bessieres‐Grattagliano…
Human mutation, 2010Wiley Online Library
Rare lethal disease gene identification remains a challenging issue, but it is amenable to
new techniques in high‐throughput sequencing (HTS). Cerebral proliferative glomeruloid
vasculopathy (PGV), or Fowler syndrome, is a severe autosomal recessive disorder of brain
angiogenesis, resulting in abnormally thickened and aberrant perforating vessels leading to
hydranencephaly. In three multiplex consanguineous families, genome‐wide SNP analysis
identified a locus of 14 Mb on chromosome 14. In addition, 280 consecutive SNPs were …
Abstract
Rare lethal disease gene identification remains a challenging issue, but it is amenable to new techniques in high‐throughput sequencing (HTS). Cerebral proliferative glomeruloid vasculopathy (PGV), or Fowler syndrome, is a severe autosomal recessive disorder of brain angiogenesis, resulting in abnormally thickened and aberrant perforating vessels leading to hydranencephaly. In three multiplex consanguineous families, genome‐wide SNP analysis identified a locus of 14 Mb on chromosome 14. In addition, 280 consecutive SNPs were identical in two Turkish families unknown to be related, suggesting a founder mutation reducing the interval to 4.1 Mb. To identify the causative gene, we then specifically enriched for this region with sequence capture and performed HTS in a proband of seven families. Due to technical constraints related to the disease, the average coverage was only 7×. Nonetheless, iterative bioinformatic analyses of the sequence data identified mutations and a large deletion in the FLVCR2 gene, encoding a 12 transmembrane domain‐containing putative transporter. A striking absence of alpha‐smooth muscle actin immunostaining in abnormal vessels in fetal PGV brains, suggests a deficit in pericytes, cells essential for capillary stabilization and remodeling during brain angiogenesis. This is the first lethal disease‐causing gene to be identified by comprehensive HTS of an entire linkage interval. Hum Mutat 31:1–8, 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Wiley Online Library