Abstract

Next-generation sequencing (NGS) enables analysis of the human genome on a scale previously unachievable by Sanger sequencing. Exome sequencing of the coding regions and conserved splice sites has been very successful in the identification of disease-causing mutations, and targeting of these regions has extended clinical diagnostic testing from analysis of fewer than ten genes per phenotype to more than 100. Noncoding mutations have been less extensively studied despite evidence from mRNA analysis for the existence of deep intronic mutations in >20 genes. We investigated individuals with hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemia and biochemical or genetic evidence to suggest noncoding mutations by using NGS to analyze the entire genomic regions of ABCC8 (117 kb) and HADH (94 kb) from overlapping ~10 kb PCR amplicons. Two deep intronic mutations, c.1333-1013A>G in ABCC8 and c.636+471G>T HADH, were identified. Both are predicted to create a cryptic splice donor site and an out-of-frame pseudoexon. Sequence analysis of mRNA from affected individuals' fibroblasts or lymphoblastoid cells confirmed mutant transcripts with pseudoexon inclusion and premature termination codons. Testing of additional individuals showed that these are founder mutations in the Irish and Turkish populations, accounting for 14% of focal hyperinsulinism cases and 32% of subjects with HADH mutations in our cohort. The identification of deep intronic mutations has previously focused on the detection of aberrant mRNA transcripts in a subset of disorders for which RNA is readily obtained from the target tissue or ectopically expressed at sufficient levels. Our approach of using NGS to analyze the entire genomic DNA sequence is applicable to any disease.

Highlights

  • Next-generation sequencing (NGS) enables analysis of the human genome on a scale previously unachievable by Sanger sequencing

  • Deep intronic mutations located >500 bp from an exon were first reported nearly 30 years ago through studies of cloned human b-globin (HBB [MIM 613985]).[1,2,3]. These base substitutions create cryptic splice donor or acceptor sites that result in the inclusion of an out-of-frame pseudoexon, which leads to a frameshift and premature termination codon

  • We studied a cohort of hyperinsulinaemic-hypoglycaemia (HH)-affected subjects in whom there was genetic evidence to suggest deep intronic mutations

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Summary

Introduction

Next-generation sequencing (NGS) enables analysis of the human genome on a scale previously unachievable by Sanger sequencing. Most intronic mutations occur within or close to conserved splice sites and are readily detected through Sanger sequencing of PCR amplicons targeting exons.

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