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Next-generation sequencing in X-linked intellectual disability
Authors:Andreas Tzschach  Ute Grasshoff  Stefanie Beck-Woedl  Claudia Dufke  Claudia Bauer  Martin Kehrer  Christina Evers  Ute Moog  Barbara Oehl-Jaschkowitz  Nataliya Di Donato  Robert Maiwald  Christine Jung  Alma Kuechler  Solveig Schulz  Peter Meinecke  Stephanie Spranger  Jürgen Kohlhase  J?rg Seidel  Silke Reif  Manuela Rieger  Angelika Riess  Marc Sturm  Julia Bickmann  Christopher Schroeder  Andreas Dufke  Olaf Riess  Peter Bauer
Abstract:X-linked intellectual disability (XLID) is a genetically heterogeneous disorder with more than 100 genes known to date. Most genes are responsible for a small proportion of patients only, which has hitherto hampered the systematic screening of large patient cohorts. We performed targeted enrichment and next-generation sequencing of 107 XLID genes in a cohort of 150 male patients. Hundred patients had sporadic intellectual disability, and 50 patients had a family history suggestive of XLID. We also analysed a sporadic female patient with severe ID and epilepsy because she had strongly skewed X-inactivation. Target enrichment and high parallel sequencing allowed a diagnostic coverage of >10 reads for ~96% of all coding bases of the XLID genes at a mean coverage of 124 reads. We found 18 pathogenic variants in 13 XLID genes (AP1S2, ATRX, CUL4B, DLG3, IQSEC2, KDM5C, MED12, OPHN1, SLC9A6, SMC1A, UBE2A, UPF3B and ZDHHC9) among the 150 male patients. Thirteen pathogenic variants were present in the group of 50 familial patients (26%), and 5 pathogenic variants among the 100 sporadic patients (5%). Systematic gene dosage analysis for low coverage exons detected one pathogenic hemizygous deletion. An IQSEC2 nonsense variant was detected in the female ID patient, providing further evidence for a role of this gene in encephalopathy in females. Skewed X-inactivation was more frequently observed in mothers with pathogenic variants compared with those without known X-linked defects. The mutation rate in the cohort of sporadic patients corroborates previous estimates of 5–10% for X-chromosomal defects in male ID patients.
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