Analysis of a case with oocyte maturation disorder caused by a heterozygous c.728C>T (p.P243L) missense variant of TUBB8 gene and literature review

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To explore the genetic basis for a woman with oocyte maturation disorder during assisted reproductive treatment (ART), and to verify the source of the variant and its impact on oocyte maturation through family verification. A 35-year-old infertile woman presented at the Reproductive Medicine Center of Gansu Provincial Maternal and Child Health Care Hospital on 20 October 2023 for a 10-year history of infertility despite unprotected intercourse was selected as study subject. Peripheral venous blood sample was collected from the proband. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) was used to detect the potential variant. Candidate variants were validated within her family by Sanger sequencing, and their deleteriousness was assessed with comprehensive bioinformatic analyses to elucidate their origin and impact on oocyte maturation. According to the Standards and Guidelines for the Interpretation of Sequence Variants (hereinafter referred to as ACMG Guidelines) formulated by the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG), the pathogenicity of the candidate variant was rated. This study was approved by the Medical Ethics Committee of Gansu Provincial Maternal and Child Health Care Hospital (Ethics No.: 2023GSFYLS78). The proband underwent three controlled ovarian-stimulation cycles as part of assisted reproductive technology, yielding a total of 29 oocytes, among which only three were mature, whilst the remainders exhibited maturation arrest. Targeted sequencing of peripheral-blood DNA revealed a heterozygous c.728C>T (p.P243L) missense variant of the TUBB8 gene. While the same variant was detected in the proband's father. Based on the ACMG guidelines, the variant was classified to be likely pathogenic (PS4_Supporting+PM2_Supporting+PP2+PP3+PP4). The heterozygous c.728C>T (p.P243L) missense variant of the TUBB8 gene probably underlay the oocyte maturation disorder in the proband, which may be either autosomal dominant or autosomal recessive. For probands with oocyte maturation disorders caused by the heterozygous c.728C>T variant of the TUBB8 gene, oocyte donation may be considered.

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To explore the clinical phenotype and pathogenesis of a child with partial duplication in the long arm of chromosome 10 (10q), and conduct a review of relevant literature. A child presented at Lianyungang Maternal and Child Health Care Hospital in April 2018 for growth retardation, intellectual disability, and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) was selected as the study subject. Peripheral blood samples were collected from the child and his parents for G-banded chromosomal karyotyping analysis. Genomic DNA was also extracted for chromosomal microarray analysis (CMA). The clinical phenotype and relevant genes were searched in the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM) and the UK Database of Genomic Variation and Phenotype in Humans using Ensembl Resources (DECIPHER). The pathogenicity of chromosomal variation was analyzed based on guidelines from the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG). Relevant literature was searched from the CNKI, Wanfang Data, and PubMed databases by using keywords such as "10q" "duplication" and "trisomy", with the time set as from the establishment of database to December 1, 2023. This study has been approved by the Medical Ethics Committee of the Lianyungang Maternal and Child Health Care Hospital (No. XM2023030). The clinical phenotype of child had included growth retardation, intellectual disability, and ASD. G-banded chromosomal analysis suggested that the child has a karyotype of 46,XY,dup(10)(q23.31q24.33), whilst both of his parents were normal. CMA analysis of the child revealed that the child was arr[19]10q23.31q24.33(87603382_104948862)×3, with a 17.34 Mb duplication in the 10q23.31q24.33 region. Search of the OMIM database suggested that the duplicated segment has contained 171 genes associated with various diseases, and search of the DECIPHER database has identified cases with overlapping with the duplication. A search of the PubMed database has identified 2 publications involving 2 patients with chromosomal duplications overlapping the 10q23.31q24.33 region with a segment length of > 10 Mb. The 2 patients had mainly manifested growth retardation, intellectual disability, ASD, and facial and limb malformations. The main pathogenic genes had included PTEN, WNT8B, LZTS2, NFKB2, PAX2, KIF11, FRA10AC1, and CNNM2. No similar case was retrieved from the CNKI and Wanfang Data databases. The partial 10q duplication as a novel CNV involving genes such as PTEN and WNT8B probably underlay the growth retardation, intellectual disability and ASD in child 1 . This study has enriched the genotype-phenotype spectrum of patients with partial 10q23.31q24.33 duplications.

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