Methylation of the 4q35 D4Z4 repeat defines disease status in facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy

Author:

Erdmann Hannes12,Scharf Florentine1,Gehling Stefanie1,Benet-Pagès Anna13,Jakubiczka Sibylle4,Becker Kerstin1,Seipelt Maria5,Kleefeld Felix6,Knop Karl Christian7,Prott Eva-Christina8,Hiebeler Miriam2,Montagnese Federica2ORCID,Gläser Dieter9,Vorgerd Matthias10,Hagenacker Tim11,Walter Maggie C2,Reilich Peter2,Neuhann Teresa1,Zenker Martin4,Holinski-Feder Elke112,Schoser Benedikt2,Abicht Angela12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Medical Genetics Center (MGZ) , 80335 Munich , Germany

2. Friedrich-Baur-Institute, Department of Neurology, Klinikum der Universität, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität , 80336 Munich , Germany

3. Institute of Neurogenomics, Helmholtz Center Munich , 85764 Neuherberg , Germany

4. Institute of Human Genetics, Universitätsklinikum Magdeburg, Otto-von-Guericke Universität , 39120 Magdeburg , Germany

5. Department of Neurology, Universitätsklinikum Marburg, Philipps-University Marburg , 35043 Marburg , Germany

6. Department of Neurology and Experimental Neurology, Charité Berlin , 10117 Berlin , Germany

7. Neurologische Praxis Neuer Wall , 20354 Hamburg , Germany

8. Praxis für Humangenetik , 42103 Wuppertal , Germany

9. Genetikum , 89231 Neu-Ulm , Germany

10. Department of Neurology, Berufgenossenschaftliches Universitätsklinikum Bergmannsheil, Ruhr-Universität Bochum , 44789 Bochum , Germany

11. Department of Neurology and Center for Translational Neuro- and Behavioral Sciences (C-TNBS), University Hospital Essen , 45147 Essen , Germany

12. Department of Medicine IV, Klinikum der Universität, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität , 80336 Munich , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Genetic diagnosis of facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) remains a challenge in clinical practice as it cannot be detected by standard sequencing methods despite being the third most common muscular dystrophy. The conventional diagnostic strategy addresses the known genetic parameters of FSHD: the required presence of a permissive haplotype, a size reduction of the D4Z4 repeat of chromosome 4q35 (defining FSHD1) or a pathogenic variant in an epigenetic suppressor gene (consistent with FSHD2). Incomplete penetrance and epistatic effects of the underlying genetic parameters as well as epigenetic parameters (D4Z4 methylation) pose challenges to diagnostic accuracy and hinder prediction of clinical severity. In order to circumvent the known limitations of conventional diagnostics and to complement genetic parameters with epigenetic ones, we developed and validated a multistage diagnostic workflow that consists of a haplotype analysis and a high-throughput methylation profile analysis (FSHD-MPA). FSHD-MPA determines the average global methylation level of the D4Z4 repeat array as well as the regional methylation of the most distal repeat unit by combining bisulphite conversion with next-generation sequencing and a bioinformatics pipeline and uses these as diagnostic parameters. We applied the diagnostic workflow to a cohort of 148 patients and compared the epigenetic parameters based on FSHD-MPA to genetic parameters of conventional genetic testing. In addition, we studied the correlation of repeat length and methylation level within the most distal repeat unit with age-corrected clinical severity and age at disease onset in FSHD patients. The results of our study show that FSHD-MPA is a powerful tool to accurately determine the epigenetic parameters of FSHD, allowing discrimination between FSHD patients and healthy individuals, while simultaneously distinguishing FSHD1 and FSHD2. The strong correlation between methylation level and clinical severity indicates that the methylation level determined by FSHD-MPA accounts for differences in disease severity among individuals with similar genetic parameters. Thus, our findings further confirm that epigenetic parameters rather than genetic parameters represent FSHD disease status and may serve as a valuable biomarker for disease status.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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