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    Pathogenic Variants in GPC4 Cause Keipert Syndrome
    Amor, DJ ; Stephenson, SEM ; Mustapha, M ; Mensah, MA ; Ockeloen, CW ; Lee, WS ; Tankard, RM ; Phelan, DG ; Shinawi, M ; de Brouwer, APM ; Pfundt, R ; Dowling, C ; Toler, TL ; Sutton, VR ; Agolini, E ; Rinelli, M ; Capolino, R ; Martinelli, D ; Zampino, G ; Dumic, M ; Reardon, W ; Shaw-Smith, C ; Leventer, RJ ; Delatycki, MB ; Kleefstra, T ; Mundlos, S ; Mortier, G ; Bahlo, M ; Allen, NJ ; Lockhart, PJ (CELL PRESS, 2019-05-02)
    Glypicans are a family of cell-surface heparan sulfate proteoglycans that regulate growth-factor signaling during development and are thought to play a role in the regulation of morphogenesis. Whole-exome sequencing of the Australian family that defined Keipert syndrome (nasodigitoacoustic syndrome) identified a hemizygous truncating variant in the gene encoding glypican 4 (GPC4). This variant, located in the final exon of GPC4, results in premature termination of the protein 51 amino acid residues prior to the stop codon, and in concomitant loss of functionally important N-linked glycosylation (Asn514) and glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor (Ser529) sites. We subsequently identified seven affected males from five additional kindreds with novel and predicted pathogenic variants in GPC4. Segregation analysis and X-inactivation studies in carrier females provided supportive evidence that the GPC4 variants caused the condition. Furthermore, functional studies of recombinant protein suggested that the truncated proteins p.Gln506∗ and p.Glu496∗ were less stable than the wild type. Clinical features of Keipert syndrome included a prominent forehead, a flat midface, hypertelorism, a broad nose, downturned corners of mouth, and digital abnormalities, whereas cognitive impairment and deafness were variable features. Studies of Gpc4 knockout mice showed evidence of the two primary features of Keipert syndrome: craniofacial abnormalities and digital abnormalities. Phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that GPC4 is most closely related to GPC6, which is associated with a bone dysplasia that has a phenotypic overlap with Keipert syndrome. Overall, we have shown that pathogenic variants in GPC4 cause a loss of function that results in Keipert syndrome, making GPC4 the third human glypican to be linked to a genetic syndrome.
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    Reducing the exome search space for Mendelian diseases using genetic linkage analysis of exome genotypes
    Smith, KR ; Bromhead, CJ ; Hildebrand, MS ; Shearer, AE ; Lockhart, PJ ; Najmabadi, H ; Leventer, RJ ; McGillivray, G ; Amor, DJ ; Smith, RJ ; Bahlo, M (BIOMED CENTRAL LTD, 2011)
    Many exome sequencing studies of Mendelian disorders fail to optimally exploit family information. Classical genetic linkage analysis is an effective method for eliminating a large fraction of the candidate causal variants discovered, even in small families that lack a unique linkage peak. We demonstrate that accurate genetic linkage mapping can be performed using SNP genotypes extracted from exome data, removing the need for separate array-based genotyping. We provide software to facilitate such analyses.
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    Neuropathology of childhood-onset basal ganglia degeneration caused by mutation of VAC14
    Stutterd, C ; Diakumis, P ; Bahlo, M ; Fernandez, MF ; Leventer, RJ ; Delatycki, M ; Amor, D ; Chow, CW ; Stephenson, S ; Meisler, MH ; Mclean, C ; Lockhart, PJ (WILEY, 2017-12)
    OBJECTIVE: To characterize the clinical features and neuropathology associated with recessive VAC14 mutations. METHODS: Whole-exome sequencing was used to identify the genetic etiology of a rapidly progressive neurological disease presenting in early childhood in two deceased siblings with distinct neuropathological features on post mortem examination. RESULTS: We identified compound heterozygous variants in VAC14 in two deceased siblings with early childhood onset of severe, progressive dystonia, and neurodegeneration. Their clinical phenotype is consistent with the VAC14-related childhood-onset, striatonigral degeneration recently described in two unrelated children. Post mortem examination demonstrated prominent vacuolation associated with degenerating neurons in the caudate nucleus, putamen, and globus pallidus, similar to previously reported ex vivo vacuoles seen in the late-endosome/lysosome of VAC14-deficient neurons. We identified upregulation of ubiquitinated granules within the cell cytoplasm and lysosomal-associated membrane protein (LAMP2) around the vacuole edge to suggest a process of vacuolation of lysosomal structures associated with active autophagocytic-associated neuronal degeneration. INTERPRETATION: Our findings reveal a distinct clinicopathological phenotype associated with recessive VAC14 mutations.
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    Diagnostic and cost utility of whole exome sequencing in peripheral neuropathy
    Walsh, M ; Bell, KM ; Chong, B ; Creed, E ; Brett, GR ; Pope, K ; Thorne, NP ; Sadedin, S ; Georgeson, P ; Phelan, DG ; Day, T ; Taylor, JA ; Sexton, A ; Lockhart, PJ ; Kiers, L ; Fahey, M ; Macciocca, I ; Gaff, CL ; Oshlack, A ; Yiu, EM ; James, PA ; Stark, Z ; Ryan, MM (WILEY, 2017-05)
    OBJECTIVE: To explore the diagnostic utility and cost effectiveness of whole exome sequencing (WES) in a cohort of individuals with peripheral neuropathy. METHODS: Singleton WES was performed in individuals recruited though one pediatric and one adult tertiary center between February 2014 and December 2015. Initial analysis was restricted to a virtual panel of 55 genes associated with peripheral neuropathies. Patients with uninformative results underwent expanded analysis of the WES data. Data on the cost of prior investigations and assessments performed for diagnostic purposes in each patient was collected. RESULTS: Fifty patients with a peripheral neuropathy were recruited (median age 18 years; range 2-68 years). The median time from initial presentation to study enrollment was 6 years 9 months (range 2 months-62 years), and the average cost of prior investigations and assessments for diagnostic purposes AU$4013 per patient. Eleven individuals received a diagnosis from the virtual panel. Eight individuals received a diagnosis following expanded analysis of the WES data, increasing the overall diagnostic yield to 38%. Two additional individuals were diagnosed with pathogenic copy number variants through SNP microarray. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides evidence that WES has a high diagnostic utility and is cost effective in patients with a peripheral neuropathy. Expanded analysis of WES data significantly improves the diagnostic yield in patients in whom a diagnosis is not found on the initial targeted analysis. This is primarily due to diagnosis of conditions caused by newly discovered genes and the resolution of complex and atypical phenotypes.
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    Recent advances in the detection of repeat expansions with short-read next-generation sequencing.
    Bahlo, M ; Bennett, MF ; Degorski, P ; Tankard, RM ; Delatycki, MB ; Lockhart, PJ (F1000 Research Ltd, 2018)
    Short tandem repeats (STRs), also known as microsatellites, are commonly defined as consisting of tandemly repeated nucleotide motifs of 2-6 base pairs in length. STRs appear throughout the human genome, and about 239,000 are documented in the Simple Repeats Track available from the UCSC (University of California, Santa Cruz) genome browser. STRs vary in size, producing highly polymorphic markers commonly used as genetic markers. A small fraction of STRs (about 30 loci) have been associated with human disease whereby one or both alleles exceed an STR-specific threshold in size, leading to disease. Detection of repeat expansions is currently performed with polymerase chain reaction-based assays or with Southern blots for large expansions. The tests are expensive and time-consuming and are not always conclusive, leading to lengthy diagnostic journeys for patients, potentially including missed diagnoses. The advent of whole exome and whole genome sequencing has identified the genetic cause of many genetic disorders; however, analysis pipelines are focused primarily on the detection of short nucleotide variations and short insertions and deletions (indels). Until recently, repeat expansions, with the exception of the smallest expansion (SCA6), were not detectable in next-generation short-read sequencing datasets and would have been ignored in most analyses. In the last two years, four analysis methods with accompanying software (ExpansionHunter, exSTRa, STRetch, and TREDPARSE) have been released. Although a comprehensive comparative analysis of the performance of these methods across all known repeat expansions is still lacking, it is clear that these methods are a valuable addition to any existing analysis pipeline. Here, we detail how to assess short-read data for evidence of expansions, reviewing all four methods and outlining their strengths and weaknesses. Implementation of these methods should lead to increased diagnostic yield of repeat expansion disorders for known STR loci and has the potential to detect novel repeat expansions.
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    Functional analysis of a hypomorphic allele shows that MMP14 catalytic activity is the prime determinant of the Winchester syndrome phenotype
    de Vos, IJHM ; Tao, EY ; Ong, SLM ; Goggi, JL ; Scerri, T ; Wilson, GR ; Low, CGM ; Wong, ASW ; Grussu, D ; Stegmann, APA ; van Geel, M ; Janssen, R ; Amor, DJ ; Bahlo, M ; Dunn, NR ; Carney, TJ ; Lockhart, PJ ; Coull, BJ ; van Steensel, MAM (OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2018-08-15)
    Winchester syndrome (WS, MIM #277950) is an extremely rare autosomal recessive skeletal dysplasia characterized by progressive joint destruction and osteolysis. To date, only one missense mutation in MMP14, encoding the membrane-bound matrix metalloprotease 14, has been reported in WS patients. Here, we report a novel hypomorphic MMP14 p.Arg111His (R111H) allele, associated with a mitigated form of WS. Functional analysis demonstrated that this mutation, in contrast to previously reported human and murine MMP14 mutations, does not affect MMP14's transport to the cell membrane. Instead, it partially impairs MMP14's proteolytic activity. This residual activity likely accounts for the mitigated phenotype observed in our patients. Based on our observations as well as previously published data, we hypothesize that MMP14's catalytic activity is the prime determinant of disease severity. Given the limitations of our in vitro assays in addressing the consequences of MMP14 dysfunction, we generated a novel mmp14a/b knockout zebrafish model. The fish accurately reflected key aspects of the WS phenotype including craniofacial malformations, kyphosis, short-stature and reduced bone density owing to defective collagen remodeling. Notably, the zebrafish model will be a valuable tool for developing novel therapeutic approaches to a devastating bone disorder.
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    De novo and inherited private variants in MAP1B in periventricular nodular heterotopia
    Heinzen, EL ; O'Neill, AC ; Zhu, X ; Allen, AS ; Bahlo, M ; Chelly, J ; Chen, MH ; Dobyns, WB ; Freytag, S ; Guerrini, R ; Leventer, RJ ; Poduri, A ; Robertson, SP ; Walsh, CA ; Zhang, M ; Hallmayer, J (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2018-05)
    Periventricular nodular heterotopia (PVNH) is a malformation of cortical development commonly associated with epilepsy. We exome sequenced 202 individuals with sporadic PVNH to identify novel genetic risk loci. We first performed a trio-based analysis and identified 219 de novo variants. Although no novel genes were implicated in this initial analysis, PVNH cases were found overall to have a significant excess of nonsynonymous de novo variants in intolerant genes (p = 3.27x10-7), suggesting a role for rare new alleles in genes yet to be associated with the condition. Using a gene-level collapsing analysis comparing cases and controls, we identified a genome-wide significant signal driven by four ultra-rare loss-of-function heterozygous variants in MAP1B, including one de novo variant. In at least one instance, the MAP1B variant was inherited from a parent with previously undiagnosed PVNH. The PVNH was frontally predominant and associated with perisylvian polymicrogyria. These results implicate MAP1B in PVNH. More broadly, our findings suggest that detrimental mutations likely arising in immediately preceding generations with incomplete penetrance may also be responsible for some apparently sporadic diseases.
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    Bioinformatics-Based Identification of Expanded Repeats: A Non-reference Intronic Pentamer Expansion in RFC1 Causes CANVAS
    Rafehi, H ; Szmulewicz, DJ ; Bennett, MF ; Sobreira, NLM ; Pope, K ; Smith, KR ; Gillies, G ; Diakumis, P ; Dolzhenko, E ; Eberle, MA ; Garcia Barcina, M ; Breen, DP ; Chancellor, AM ; Cremer, PD ; Delatycki, MB ; Fogel, BL ; Hackett, A ; Halmagyi, GM ; Kapetanovic, S ; Lang, A ; Mossman, S ; Mu, W ; Patrikios, P ; Perlman, SL ; Rosemergy, I ; Storey, E ; Watson, SRD ; Wilson, MA ; Zee, DS ; Valle, D ; Amor, DJ ; Bahlo, M ; Lockhart, PJ (CELL PRESS, 2019-07-03)
    Genomic technologies such as next-generation sequencing (NGS) are revolutionizing molecular diagnostics and clinical medicine. However, these approaches have proven inefficient at identifying pathogenic repeat expansions. Here, we apply a collection of bioinformatics tools that can be utilized to identify either known or novel expanded repeat sequences in NGS data. We performed genetic studies of a cohort of 35 individuals from 22 families with a clinical diagnosis of cerebellar ataxia with neuropathy and bilateral vestibular areflexia syndrome (CANVAS). Analysis of whole-genome sequence (WGS) data with five independent algorithms identified a recessively inherited intronic repeat expansion [(AAGGG)exp] in the gene encoding Replication Factor C1 (RFC1). This motif, not reported in the reference sequence, localized to an Alu element and replaced the reference (AAAAG)11 short tandem repeat. Genetic analyses confirmed the pathogenic expansion in 18 of 22 CANVAS-affected families and identified a core ancestral haplotype, estimated to have arisen in Europe more than twenty-five thousand years ago. WGS of the four RFC1-negative CANVAS-affected families identified plausible variants in three, with genomic re-diagnosis of SCA3, spastic ataxia of the Charlevoix-Saguenay type, and SCA45. This study identified the genetic basis of CANVAS and demonstrated that these improved bioinformatics tools increase the diagnostic utility of WGS to determine the genetic basis of a heterogeneous group of clinically overlapping neurogenetic disorders.