Molecular diagnosis of glycogen storage disease and disorders with overlapping clinical symptoms by massive parallel sequencing

作者:Vega Ana I; Medrano Celia; Navarrete Rosa; Desviat Lourdes R; Merinero Begona; Rodriguez Pombo Pilar; Vitoria Isidro; Ugarte Magdalena; Perez Cerda Celia; Perez Belen*
来源:Genetics in Medicine, 2016, 18(10): 1037-1043.
DOI:10.1038/gim.2015.217

摘要

Purpose: Glycogen storage disease (GSD) is an umbrella term for a group of genetic disorders that involve the abnormal metabolism of glycogen; to date, 23 types of GSD have been identified. The nonspecific clinical presentation of GSD and the lack of specific biomarkers mean that Sanger sequencing is now widely relied on for making a diagnosis. However, this gene-by-gene sequencing technique is both laborious and costly, which is a consequence of the number of genes to be sequenced and the large size of some genes. Methods: This work reports the use of massive parallel sequencing to diagnose patients at our laboratory in Spain using either a customized gene panel (targeted exome sequencing) or the Illumina Clinical-Exome TruSight One Gene Panel (clinical exome sequencing (CES)). Sequence variants were matched against biochemical and clinical hallmarks. Results: Pathogenic mutations were detected in 23 patients. -Twenty-two mutations were recognized (mostly loss-of-function mutations), including 11 that were novel in GSD-associated genes. In addition, CES detected five patients with mutations in ALDOB, LIPA, NKX2-5, CPT2, or ANO5. Although these genes are not involved in GSD, they are associated with overlapping phenotypic characteristics such as hepatic, muscular, and cardiac dysfunction. Conclusions: These results show that next-generation sequencing, in combination with the detection of biochemical and clinical hallmarks, provides an accurate, high-throughput means of making genetic diagnoses of GSD and related diseases.

  • 出版日期2016-10