Establishing the involvement of the novel gene AGBL5 in retinitis pigmentosa by whole genome sequencing

Author:

Branham Kari1,Matsui Hiroko2,Biswas Pooja3ORCID,Guru Aditya A.3,Hicks Michael4,Suk John J.3,Li He2,Jakubosky David2,Long Tao4,Telenti Amalio4,Nariai Naoki2,Heckenlively John R.1,Frazer Kelly A.25,Sieving Paul A.6,Ayyagari Radha3

Affiliation:

1. Kellogg Eye Center, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan;

2. Institute for Genomic Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California;

3. Shiley Eye Institute, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California;

4. Human Longevity Incorporated, San Diego, California;

5. Department of Pediatrics and Rady Children's Hospital, Division of Genome Information Sciences, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California; and

6. National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland

Abstract

While more than 250 genes are known to cause inherited retinal degenerations (IRD), nearly 40–50% of families have the genetic basis for their disease unknown. In this study we sought to identify the underlying cause of IRD in a family by whole genome sequence (WGS) analysis. Clinical characterization including standard ophthalmic examination, fundus photography, visual field testing, electroretinography, and review of medical and family history was performed. WGS was performed on affected and unaffected family members using Illumina HiSeq X10. Sequence reads were aligned to hg19 using BWA-MEM and variant calling was performed with Genome Analysis Toolkit. The called variants were annotated with SnpEff v4.11, PolyPhen v2.2.2, and CADD v1.3. Copy number variations were called using Genome STRiP (svtoolkit 2.00.1611) and SpeedSeq software. Variants were filtered to detect rare potentially deleterious variants segregating with disease. Candidate variants were validated by dideoxy sequencing. Clinical evaluation revealed typical adolescent-onset recessive retinitis pigmentosa (arRP) in affected members. WGS identified about 4 million variants in each individual. Two rare and potentially deleterious compound heterozygous variants p.Arg281Cys and p.Arg487* were identified in the gene ATP/GTP binding protein like 5 ( AGBL5) as likely causal variants. No additional variants in IRD genes that segregated with disease were identified. Mutation analysis confirmed the segregation of these variants with the IRD in the pedigree. Homology models indicated destabilization of AGBL5 due to the p.Arg281Cys change. Our findings establish the involvement of mutations in AGBL5 in RP and validate the WGS variant filtering pipeline we designed.

Funder

Foundation Fighting Blindness (Foundation Fighting Blindness, Inc.)

HHS | National Institutes of Health (NIH)

University of California San Diego-Dept of Ophthalmology

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Genetics,Physiology

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