Abstract

BackgroundNGS-based genetic diagnosis has completely revolutionized the human genetics field. In this study, we have aimed to identify new genes and mutations by Whole Exome Sequencing (WES) responsible for inherited retinal dystrophies (IRD).MethodsA cohort of 33 pedigrees affected with a variety of retinal disorders was analysed by WES. Initial prioritization analysis included around 300 IRD-associated genes. In non-diagnosed families a search for pathogenic mutations in novel genes was undertaken.ResultsGenetic diagnosis was attained in 18 families. Moreover, a plausible candidate is proposed for 10 more cases. Two thirds of the mutations were novel, including 4 chromosomal rearrangements, which expand the IRD allelic heterogeneity and highlight the contribution of private mutations. Our results prompted clinical re-evaluation of some patients resulting in assignment to a syndromic instead of non-syndromic IRD. Notably, WES unveiled four new candidates for non-syndromic IRD: SEMA6B, CEP78, CEP250, SCLT1, the two latter previously associated to syndromic disorders. We provide functional data supporting that missense mutations in CEP250 alter cilia formation.ConclusionThe diagnostic efficiency of WES, and strictly following the ACMG/AMP criteria is 55% in reported causative genes or functionally supported new candidates, plus 30% families in which likely pathogenic or VGUS/VUS variants were identified in plausible candidates. Our results highlight the clinical utility of WES for molecular diagnosis of IRD, provide a wider spectrum of mutations and concomitant genetic variants, and challenge our view on syndromic vs non-syndromic, and causative vs modifier genes.

Highlights

  • Massive sequencing, Whole Exome Sequencing (WES), has completely revolutionized genetic diagnosis of highly heterogeneous monogenic disorders

  • We have aimed to identify new genes and mutations by Whole Exome Sequencing (WES) responsible for inherited retinal dystrophies (IRD)

  • We provide functional data supporting that missense mutations in CEP250 alter cilia formation

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Summary

Introduction

Whole Exome Sequencing (WES), has completely revolutionized genetic diagnosis of highly heterogeneous monogenic disorders. In the field of inherited retinal disorders (IRD), more than 20 novel genes, mostly identified by WES, have been reported since the beginning of 2014 (an average of one novel gene per month). Aside WES, other massive sequencing-based approaches have been implemented in IRD genetic diagnosis laboratories, such as targeted-sequencing of a limited set of causative/candidate genes [9,10,11,12]. These approaches have proved useful to study large cohorts in order to identify reported or novel mutations in known genes, but they may fall short when the pathogenic mutation maps in an unreported candidate. We have aimed to identify new genes and mutations by Whole Exome Sequencing (WES) responsible for inherited retinal dystrophies (IRD)

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