ABSTRACT
Genetic cardiomyopathies (CM) are disorders that affect morphology and function of cardiac muscle. Significant number of genes have been implicated in causing the phenotype. It is one of the leading genetic causes of death in young. We performed a study to understand the genetic variants in primary cardiomyopathies in an Indian cohort. Study comprised of 22 probands (13 with family history) representing hypertrophic (n = 10), dilated (n = 7), restrictive (n = 2) and arrhythmogenic ventricular(n = 3) cardiomyopathies. Genomic DNA was target captured with a panel of 46 genes and libraries sequenced on Illumina platform. Analysis identified, reported pathogenic as well as novel pathogenic (n = 6) variants in 16 probands. Of the 10 HCM patients, candidate variants were identified in nine of them involving sarcomere genes (62%, MYBPC3, MYH6, MYH7, MYL3, TTN), Z-disc (10%, ACTN2, LDB3, NEXN,), desmosome (10%, DSG2, DSP, PKP2) cytoskeletal (4%, DTNA) and ion channel (10% RYR2). In four DCM patients, variants were identified in genes NEXN, LMNA and TTN. Three arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVD) patients carried mutations in desmosome genes. Rare TTN variants were identified in multiple patients. Targeted capture and sequencing resulted in identification of candidate variants in about 70% of the samples which will help in management of disease in affected individual as well as in screening and early diagnosis in asymptomatic family members. Amongst the analysed cases, 22% were inconclusive without any significant variant identified. Study illustrates the utility of next-generation multi-gene panel as a cost-effective genetic testing to screen all forms of primary cardiomyopathies.
ABSTRACT
Disease associated chromosomal rearrangements often have break points located within disease causing genes or in their vicinity. The purpose of this study is to characterize a balanced reciprocal translocation in a girl with intellectual disability and seizures by positional cloning and whole genome sequencing. The translocation was identification by G- banding and confirmed by WCP FISH. Fine mapping using BAC clones and whole genome sequencing using Oxford nanopore long read sequencing technology for a 1.46 X coverage of the genome was done. The positional cloning showed split signals with BAC RP11-943â¯J20. Long read sequencing analysis of chimeric reads carrying parts of chromosomes X and 20 helped to identify the breakpoints to be in intron 2 of ARHGEF9 gene on Xp11.1 and on 20p13 between RASSF2 and SLC23A2 genes. This is the first report of translocation which successfully delineated to single base resolution using Nanopore sequencing. The genotype-phenotype correlation is discussed.