RESUMO
INTRODUCTION: Piebaldism is the dominantly inherited skin disorder clinically characterized by congenital stable and well circumscribed patches of leukoderma (depigmented skin) of ventral distribution, involving central forehead, frontal chest and abdomen and central portion of limbs, and by localized poliosis (white hair). Inherited or de novo mutations in proto-oncogene KIT, encoding the transmembrane tyrosine kinase receptor c-kit, underly the majority of piebaldism cases. Piebaldism is a disorder characterized by incomplete penetrance and variable expressivity.
Assuntos
Piebaldismo , Humanos , Piebaldismo/genética , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas c-kit/genética , Manchas Café com Leite/genéticaRESUMO
Whole exome sequencing (WES) has become routine in clinical practice, especially in studies of recessive hereditary diseases in inbred consanguineous families, where homozygosity of a founder mutation is assumed. Multiple members of two consanguineous families of a single Bedouin tribe were diagnosed with apparently autosomal recessive/pseudo-dominant retinitis pigmentosa (RP). Affected individuals exhibited severe visual impairment with nyctalopia, marked constriction of visual fields, markedly reduced and delayed responses on electro-retinography (ERG) and eventual loss of central vision. Combined copy-number variant (CNV) analysis, haplotype reconstruction and WES of the kindred identified two distinct novel mutations in EYS (RP25): a p.(W1817*) nonsense mutation (identified through WES) and a large deletion encompassing 9 of the 43 exons, that was missed by WES and was identified through microarray CNV analysis. Segregation analysis of both mutations demonstrated that all affected individuals were either homozygous for one of the mutations, or compound heterozygous for both. The two mutations are predicted to cause loss of function of the encoded protein and were not present in screening of 200 ethnically-matched controls. Our findings of two distinct mutations in the same gene in a single inbred kindred, identified only through combined WES and microarray CNV analysis, highlight the limitations of either CNV or WES alone, as the heterozygous deletion had normal WES read-depth values. Moreover, they demonstrate pitfalls in homozygosity mapping for disease-causing variant identification in inbred communities.