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Identification and quantification of oligogenic loss-of-function disorders
Authors:Arthur Stefanski  Eduardo Pérez-Palma  Marko Mrdjen  Megan McHugh  Costin Leu  Dennis Lal
Institution:1. Genomic Medicine Institute, Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland, OH;2. Epilepsy Center, Neurological Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH;3. Universidad del Desarrollo, Centro de Genética y Genómica, Facultad de Medicina Clínica Alemana, Santiago, Chile;4. Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, MA;5. Cologne Center for Genomics (CCG), University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany
Abstract:PurposeMonogenic disorders can present clinically heterogeneous symptoms. We hypothesized that in patients with a monogenic disorder caused by a large deletion, frequently additional loss-of-function (LOF)-intolerant genes are affected, potentially contributing to the phenotype.MethodsWe investigated the LOF-intolerant gene distribution across the genome and its association with benign population and pathogenic classified deletions from individuals with presumably monogenic disorders. For people with presumably monogenic epilepsy, we compared Human Phenotype Ontology terms in people with large and small deletions.ResultsWe identified LOF-intolerant gene dense regions that were enriched for ClinVar and depleted for population copy number variants. Analysis of data from >143,000 individuals with a suspected monogenic disorder showed that 2.5% of haploinsufficiency disorder–associated deletions can affect at least 1 other LOF-intolerant gene. Focusing on epilepsy, we observed that 13.1% of pathogenic and likely pathogenic ClinVar deletions <3 megabase pair, covering the diagnostically most relevant genes, affected at least 1 additional LOF-intolerant gene. Those patients have potentially more complex phenotypes with increasing deletion size.ConclusionWe could systematically show that large deletions frequently affected admditional LOF-intolerant genes in addition to the established disease gene. Further research is needed to understand how additional potential disease-relevant genes influence monogenic disorders to improve clinical care and the efficacy of targeted therapies.
Keywords:CNV  Epilepsy  Loss-of-function  Monogenic  Oligogenic
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