Abstract

BackgroundGenomic disorders present a wide spectrum of unrelated clinical entities that result from genomic rearrangements. Interstitial insertions requiring three points of breakage are rare genomic rearrangement events. The pseudoautosomal region PAR1, homologous between the Xp22 and Yp11 loci, has a high crossover and recombination rate. A 180 bp human-specific palindrome at Xq27.1 appears to be a hotspot for genomic rearrangement, and several genetic diseases/phenotypes associated with Xq27.1 palindrome-driven genomic rearrangement have been reported. Here we investigate a Chinese family with an extremely rare X-linked compound phenotype that remains undiagnosed. We attempt to identify underlying genetic causes by an integrated genome analysis.MethodsA five-generation Chinese family with a distinct X-linked compound phenotype was recruited. Peripheral blood samples were collected and genomic DNA was extracted. Systemic physical and lab examinations were performed to evaluate the phenotype. An integrated genomic analysis was performed. Genotyping and linkage analysis were conducted to map the disease locus. Whole exome sequencing was performed to detect mutations in coding region. Whole genome sequencing was used to detect single nucleotide variations, small insertions, small deletions, or large structural variations. Copy number variation scanning was also performed on the genome scale. Interstitial insertion was confirmed by gap-PCR and quantitative-PCR, and breakpoint junctions were identified by genome walking and direct sequencing. Expression of products of genes nearby to the Xq27.1 palindrome was measured in peripheral blood from patients and unrelated controls via quantitative-PCR.ResultsThe identified compound phenotype of genu varum, cubitus valgus, and everted lipsdoes not match any reported clinical entities. Fine mapping and linkage analysis identified a candidate interval of 4 Mb on the X chromosome. No potential coding region mutations were detected. A 105 kb genomic fragment of PAR1 containing no coding genes was duplicated and inserted into the center of a human-specific palindrome at Xq27.1. The interstitial insertion fully cosegregated with the family phenotype. No expression of FGF13 or SOX3 was detected in peripheral blood from the proband or unrelated controls.ConclusionWe report an extremely rare phenotype associated with an infrequently-seen genomic rearrangement. The novel compound phenotype is X-linked and characterized by genu varum, cubitus valgus, and everted lips. A 105 kb interstitial insertion of a PAR1 fragment into the Xq27.1 palindrome is associated with the phenotype in the family. The present study identified the underlying genetic cause of the phenotype, expanding the spectrum of known human-specific Xq27.1 palindrome insertion events and associated phenotypes.

Highlights

  • Genomic disorders present a wide spectrum of unrelated clinical entities that result from genomic rearrangements

  • Genu varum appeared when he started to walk at 1-year-old and became worse as height and weight increase

  • Patients in the family showed no abnormality of bone mineralization via blood biochemical examination and no obvious changes were observed in sclerotin, bone cortex, or bone trabecula of bones composing the hip and knee joints, ruling out rickets and metaphyseal chondrodysplasia

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Summary

Introduction

Genomic disorders present a wide spectrum of unrelated clinical entities that result from genomic rearrangements. We investigate a Chinese family with an extremely rare X-linked compound phenotype that remains undiagnosed. With the efforts of the medical and science communities and the revolutionary progress made in the field of DNA analysis, more than 5000 mendelian disorders are well recognized both by phenotype and molecular basis [1]. Some have described phenotypes with unknown molecular basis, while others are only known as suspected mendelian basis. For these conditions, no diagnoses are available, no biological causes are understood, and progression or whether a therapy can be found is unknown. We collected a Chinese family with extremely rare phenotypes transmitted in an X-linked recessive manner. No treatment was effective even with surgical intervention

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