Non-coding variants are a rare cause of recessive developmental disorders in trans with coding variants

Genomics England Research Consortium, Jenny Lord*, Carolina J Oquendo, Htoo A Wai, John G Holloway, Alexandra Martin-Geary, Alexander Jm Blakes, Elena Arciero, Silvia Domcke, Anne-Marie Childs, Karen Low, Julia Rankin, Diana Baralle, Hilary C Martin, Nicola Whiffin*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

Abstract

Purpose:
Identifying pathogenic noncoding variants is challenging. A single protein-altering variant is often identified in a recessive gene in individuals with developmental disorders (DD), but the prevalence of pathogenic noncoding “second hits” in trans with these is unknown.

Methods:
In 4073 genetically undiagnosed rare-disease trio probands from the 100,000 Genomes project, we identified rare heterozygous protein-altering variants in recessive DD-associated genes. We identified rare noncoding variants on the other haplotype in introns, untranslated regions, promoters, and candidate enhancer regions. We clinically evaluated the top candidates for phenotypic fit and performed functional testing where possible.

Results:
We identified 3761 rare heterozygous loss-of-function or ClinVar pathogenic variants in recessive DD-associated genes in 2430 probands. For 1366 (36.3%) of these, we identified at least 1 rare noncoding variant in trans. Bioinformatic filtering and clinical review, revealed 7 to be a good clinical fit. After detailed characterization, we identified likely diagnoses for 3 probands (in GAA, NPHP3, and PKHD1) and candidate diagnoses in a further 3 (PAH, LAMA2, and IGHMBP2).

Conclusion:
We developed a systematic approach to uncover new diagnoses involving compound heterozygous coding/noncoding variants and conclude that this mechanism is likely to be a rare cause of DDs.
Original languageEnglish
Article number101249
Number of pages38
JournalGenetics in Medicine
Volume26
Issue number12
Early online date3 Sept 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors.

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