Abstract
AbstractBackgroundRare mutations in genes associated with Mendelian forms of disease are a potential mechanism for sporadic disease. The need to assess the clinical significance of such variants is increasing as personalized medicine and genome sequencing increases.ObjectiveTo evaluate the rate of rare, functional variants in dystonia genes in the general population to improve interpretation of the clinical relevance of potentially pathogenic variants in dystonia cases.MethodsWe performed an “aggregated” collapsing analysis of exome sequence that considered rare coding variants in genes previously associated with dystonia, a rare neurological movement disorder, on 2,372 population controls of European ethnicity. We then performed a pilot study in sporadic dystonia to assess whether there was a substantially greater incidence of individuals with rare variation in dystonia genes.ResultsNearly half of population controls had a rare coding variant when 148 genes associated with a dystonia phenotype were considered. When the subset of genes causing isolated dystonia (14 genes) was evaluated, 3-4% of controls harbored rare qualifying variants. Our pilot study of case exomes was powered to identify a five-fold higher or greater rate of qualifying variants in isolated dystonia genes in sporadic dystonia cases compared to population controls; we did not find such an enrichment.ConclusionsWe provide the first systematic analysis of rare variation in dystonia genes considered collectively. Our findings emphasize the need to consider the overall frequency of variants in rare disease-related genes in the general population when considering their potential role in clinical presentations.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory