A Complex Intrachromosomal Rearrangement Disrupting IRF6 in a Family with Popliteal Pterygium and Van der Woude Syndromes

Author:

Al-Kurbi Alya A.12ORCID,Aliyev Elbay2ORCID,AlSa’afin Sana1,Aamer Waleed2ORCID,Palaniswamy Sasirekha2ORCID,Al-Maraghi Aljazi2,Kilani Houda3,Akil Ammira Al-Shabeeb2,Stotland Mitchell A.34,Fakhro Khalid A.125ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Health and Life Sciences, Hamad Bin Khalifa University, Doha 34110, Qatar

2. Department of Human Genetics, Sidra Medicine, Doha 26999, Qatar

3. Division of Plastic and Craniofacial Surgery, Sidra Medicine, Doha 26999, Qatar

4. Department of Surgery, Weill Cornell Medical College, Doha 24144, Qatar

5. Department of Genetic Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College, Doha 24144, Qatar

Abstract

Clefts of the lip and/or palate (CL/P) are considered the most common form of congenital anomalies occurring either in isolation or in association with other clinical features. Van der woude syndrome (VWS) is associated with about 2% of all CL/P cases and is further characterized by having lower lip pits. Popliteal pterygium syndrome (PPS) is a more severe form of VWS, normally characterized by orofacial clefts, lower lip pits, skin webbing, skeletal anomalies and syndactyly of toes and fingers. Both syndromes are inherited in an autosomal dominant manner, usually caused by heterozygous mutations in the Interferon Regulatory Factor 6 (IRF6) gene. Here we report the case of a two-generation family where the index presented with popliteal pterygium syndrome while both the father and sister had clinical features of van der woude syndrome, but without any point mutations detected by re-sequencing of known gene panels or microarray testing. Using whole genome sequencing (WGS) followed by local de novo assembly, we discover and validate a copy-neutral, 429 kb complex intra-chromosomal rearrangement in the long arm of chromosome 1, disrupting the IRF6 gene. This variant is copy-neutral, novel against publicly available databases, and segregates in the family in an autosomal dominant pattern. This finding suggests that missing heritability in rare diseases may be due to complex genomic rearrangements that can be resolved by WGS and de novo assembly, helping deliver answers to patients where no genetic etiology was identified by other means.

Funder

Qatar National Research Fund’s National Priorities Research Program

Path to Precision Medicine Program

Sidra Medicine’s Precision Medicine Program Internal Research Fund

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

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