Exome Sequencing Reveals De Novo Variants in Congenital Scoliosis

Author:

Murakami Kohei12ORCID,Kikugawa Shingo3,Seki Shoji4,Terai Hidetomi5ORCID,Suzuki Takako16,Nakano Masaki1,Takahashi Jun1,Nakamura Yukio1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Shinshu University School of Medicine, Matsumoto, Nagano, Japan

2. Laboratory of Immunology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Okayama University of Science, Imabari, Ehime, Japan

3. DNA Chip Research Inc., Minato-ku, Tokyo, Japan

4. Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toyama, Toyama, Japan

5. Department of Orthopedics, Osaka City University Graduate School of Medicine, Osaka, Japan

6. Department of Human Nutrition, Faculty of Human Nutrition, Tokyo Kasei Gakuin University, Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

AbstractCongenital scoliosis (CS) is a lateral curvature of the spine characterized by the presence of vertebral anomalies. Pathogenic genetic variants in the TBX6 gene are one of the causes of CS. However, since many clinically diagnosed cases of CS are without known TBX6 gene variations, this study aims to uncover new genes related to disease susceptibility of CS by exome sequencing (ES). This study employed ES in a cohort of 5 Japanese patients with CS and their healthy parents or a sister for a total of 16 samples among 5 families. Variant interpretation was performed using SIFT, PolyPhen-2, Mutation Taster, and CADD. Four de novo variants were identified by ES and confirmed by Sanger sequencing: 1 frameshift variant (SHISA3) and 3 missense variants (AGBL5, HDAC4, and PDE2A). ES also uncovered 1 homozygous variant in the MOCOS gene. All of these variants were predicted to be deleterious by SIFT, PolyPhen-2, Mutation Taster, and/or CADD. The number of de novo variants identified in this study was exactly what would be expected by chance. Additional functional studies or gathering matched patients using Gene Matcher are needed.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Genetics(clinical),Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

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