scholarly journals Rare among Rare: Phenotypes of Uncommon CMT Genotypes

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. 1616
Author(s):  
Luca Gentile ◽  
Massimo Russo ◽  
Federica Taioli ◽  
Moreno Ferrarini ◽  
M’Hammed Aguennouz ◽  
...  

(1) Background: Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease (CMT) is the most frequent form of inherited chronic motor and sensory polyneuropathy. Over 100 CMT causative genes have been identified. Previous reports found PMP22, GJB1, MPZ, and MFN2 as the most frequently involved genes. Other genes, such as BSCL2, MORC2, HINT1, LITAF, GARS, and autosomal dominant GDAP1 are responsible for only a minority of CMT cases. (2) Methods: we present here our records of CMT patients harboring a mutation in one of these rare genes (BSCL2, MORC2, HINT1, LITAF, GARS, autosomal dominant GDAP1). We studied 17 patients from 8 unrelated families. All subjects underwent neurologic evaluation and genetic testing by next-generation sequencing on an Ion Torrent PGM (Thermo Fischer) with a 44-gene custom panel. (3) Results: the following variants were found: BSCL2 c.263A > G p.Asn88Ser (eight subjects), MORC2 c.1503A > T p.Gln501His (one subject), HINT1 c.110G > C p.Arg37Pro (one subject), LITAF c.404C > G p.Pro135Arg (two subjects), GARS c.1660G > A p.Asp554Asn (three subjects), GDAP1 c.374G > A p.Arg125Gln (two subjects). (4) Expanding the spectrum of CMT phenotypes is of high relevance, especially for less common variants that have a higher risk of remaining undiagnosed. The necessity of reaching a genetic definition for most patients is great, potentially making them eligible for future experimentations.

PeerJ ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. e6661 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arianna Nicolussi ◽  
Francesca Belardinilli ◽  
Yasaman Mahdavian ◽  
Valeria Colicchia ◽  
Sonia D’Inzeo ◽  
...  

Background Conventional methods used to identify BRCA1 and BRCA2 germline mutations in hereditary cancers, such as Sanger sequencing/multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA), are time-consuming and expensive, due to the large size of the genes. The recent introduction of next-generation sequencing (NGS) benchtop platforms offered a powerful alternative for mutation detection, dramatically improving the speed and the efficiency of DNA testing. Here we tested the performance of the Ion Torrent PGM platform with the Ion AmpliSeq BRCA1 and BRCA2 Panel in our clinical routine of breast/ovarian hereditary cancer syndrome assessment. Methods We first tested the NGS approach in a cohort of 11 patients (training set) who had previously undergone genetic diagnosis in our laboratory by conventional methods. Then, we applied the optimized pipeline to the consecutive cohort of 136 uncharacterized probands (validation set). Results By minimal adjustments in the analytical pipeline of Torrent Suite Software we obtained a 100% concordance with Sanger results regarding the identification of single nucleotide alterations, insertions, and deletions with the exception of three large genomic rearrangements (LGRs) contained in the training set. The optimized pipeline applied to the validation set (VS), identified pathogenic and polymorphic variants, including a novel BRCA2 pathogenic variant at exon 3, 100% of which were confirmed by Sanger in their correct zygosity status. To identify LGRs, all negative samples of the VS were subjected to MLPA analysis. Discussion Our experience strongly supports that the Ion Torrent PGM technology in BRCA1 and BRCA2 germline variant identification, combined with MLPA analysis, is highly sensitive, easy to use, faster, and cheaper than traditional (Sanger sequencing/MLPA) approaches.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 5634-5634
Author(s):  
Sozan Karim

Abstract Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) is the most common adult leukaemia in the Western world. The disease is characterised by a great variability in clinical course and response to treatment. Acquired somatic mutations in genes related to multiple signal pathways have recently emerged as important factors contributing to this heterogeneity. These mutations accumulate with disease progression or development of therapy resistance. However, with conventional methods they are very difficult to be detected in a single test, particularly when the size of the affected cell population is small. Therefore, there is a clinical need for a rapid, reliable, affordable and highly sensitive sequencing method to monitor these mutations from an early stage of this disease. Herein we developed an ultra-deep next generation sequencing approach based on Ion Torrent PGM to sequence a total of 246 exons of 15 genes including TP53, ATM, BIRC3, NOTCH1, SF3B1, MYD88, LRP1B, SAMHD1, FBXW7, POT1, HISTIH1E, XPO1, CHD2, PCLO and ZFPM2. These genes were selected because mutations in them have been reported to involve at least 5% of CLL patients and associate with poor outcome of CLL. Serial CLL samples were collected at multiple time points from diagnosis to disease progression/drug resistance from a cohort of 33 patients. Initially, target DNA in samples taken at advanced disease stages, without or with mutations in TP53 as detected and quantified by FASAY assay and Sanger sequencing, was enriched and amplified using Agilent HaloPlex probes, with 4604 amplicons for a sequenceable size of 135.91 Kbp of each sample. On each Ion 318 Chip (1 GB output), barcoded DNA enrichment preparations from 4 patients were sequenced by the PGM. For confirmation, the same patient samples were tested repeatedly in an independent experiment starting from DNA preparation. The sequence data were aligned to a human reference genome (Hg19); variants were called by the Torrent Variant Caller (v4.0-6) and visualised with the IGV. Results showed that the target coverage was 99.999% and an average coverage depth 3941x. Importantly, all of the known TP53 mutations were repeatedly detected at expected frequencies. In addition, extra mutations at lower levels (5% - 20% alleles) in multiple genes, including TP53 and SF3B1, were detected. In a sensitivity test of this method, DNA samples from 5 cases, each with a known % of mutation in TP53measured by FASAY assay and Sanger sequencing, were pooled together and then mixed with a wild-type DNA sample to serially dilute these mutations to 20% - 0.2% alleles before target enrichment. With an average coverage depth of 1843x (range: 1610 - 2187) for these 5 target locations, each mutation was readily detected at 20%, 5% and 1%, with the average quality scores being 1497.3, 61.2 and 29.4, respectively. However, only 3 out the 5 mutations could be detected at the level of 0.2%. Taken together, we have successfully developed a sensitive next generation sequencing method for detecting mutations in a CLL gene panel. This allows us to monitor multiple mutations affecting as low as 1% of alleles in CLL samples throughout the disease course and possibly discover clinically useful biomarker(s) for CLL progression and resistance to therapy. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2001 ◽  
Vol 9 (8) ◽  
pp. 646-650 ◽  
Author(s):  
ShoukhratM Ismailov ◽  
ValeriyP Fedotov ◽  
ElenaL Dadali ◽  
AlexanderV Polyakov ◽  
Christine Van Broeckhoven ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 21 (9-10) ◽  
pp. 688-689
Author(s):  
M. Guijarro ◽  
P. Blanco-Arias ◽  
J. Pardo ◽  
C. Concheiro-Álvarez ◽  
B. San Millán ◽  
...  

2010 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 334-344 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafael Sivera ◽  
Carmen Espinós ◽  
Juan J. Vílchez ◽  
Fernando Mas ◽  
Dolores Martínez-Rubio ◽  
...  

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