PurposeMicrocephaly is a sign of many genetic conditions but has been rarely systematically evaluated. We therefore comprehensively studied the clinical and genetic landscape of an unselected cohort of patients with microcephaly.MethodsWe performed clinical assessment, high-resolution chromosomal microarray analysis, exome sequencing, and functional studies in 62 patients (58% with primary microcephaly [PM], 27% with secondary microcephaly [SM], and 15% of unknown onset).ResultsWe found severity of developmental delay/intellectual disability correlating with severity of microcephaly in PM, but not SM. We detected causative variants in 48.4% of patients and found divergent inheritance and variant pattern for PM (mainly recessive and likely gene-disrupting [LGD]) versus SM (all dominant de novo and evenly LGD or missense). While centrosome-related pathways were solely identified in PM, transcriptional regulation was the most frequently affected pathway in both SM and PM. Unexpectedly, we found causative variants in different mitochondria-related genes accounting for ~5% of patients, which emphasizes their role even in syndromic PM. Additionally, we delineated novel candidate genes involved in centrosome-related pathway (SPAG5, TEDC1), Wnt signaling (VPS26A, ZNRF3), and RNA trafficking (DDX1).ConclusionOur findings enable improved evaluation and genetic counseling of PM and SM patients and further elucidate microcephaly pathways.
Meningiomas are tumors that arise from the coverings of the brain or spinal cord. 5% of the cases turn into malignant forms with aggressive clinical behavior and increased risk of tumor recurrence. One hundred and five patients with meningiomas were operated by open surgery. To investigate predictors of meningioma recurrence in total 124 samples of 105 patients were investigated by iFISH. Dual-probe hybridization was performed to access chromosomal alterations of chromosomes 1p-, 9p- and 22q. Additionally, methylation of TIMP3 and p16 was analyzed with MS-PCR. Of the 105 investigated tumors 59.1% (62/105) were WHO grade I, 33.3% (35/105) were WHO grade II and 7.7% (8/105) were anaplastic meningiomas (grade III), respectively. The histopathological data correlates with the recurrence rate of the investigated meningiomas. Hypermethylation of TIMP3 was detected in 13.3% of all meningiomas: 10.9% in WHO grade I meningiomas, 25.0% in grade II and 14.3% in grade III meningiomas, respectively. No correlation of TIMP3 hypermethylation with tumor recurrence or WHO grade (p = 0.2) was observed. Interestingly, deletion of 1p36 emerged as a significant predictor of shorter overall survival (log rank test, p<0.001), whereas TIMP3 promoter methylation had no significant effect on overall survival (log rank test, p = 0.799). The results of the current study support the finding that the deletion of chromosome 1p is an independent marker of meningioma recurrence and progression (p = 0.0097). Therefore the measurement of genetic aberrations in meningiomas allows in a combined histological approach a more precise assessment of the prognosis of meningiomas than histopathology alone.
BACKGROUND: Since the advent of high-throughput sequencing technologies, organised germline screening, independent of the personal and family cancer history, has been frequently proposed. Since ethnic and geographic populations significantly differ in their mutation spectra and prevalence, one critical prerequisite would be the knowledge of the expected carrier frequencies. OBJECTIVE: For the first time, in a retrospective non-cancer related cohort from a single Swiss genetic centre, we systematically assessed the prevalence of secondary findings in 19 genes (BRCA1/2 plus 17 non-BRCA genes) previously designated by the US National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) for hereditary breast and ovarian cancer (HBOC) germline testing. DESIGN: A total of 400 individuals without a cancer diagnosis undergoing whole-exome sequencing (WES) analysis for neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) from 2015 to 2017 at IMG Zurich were included after quality assessment. Among these, 180 were unaffected parental couples, 27 unaffected parental singles and 13 NDD index patients (mean age 43 years). The majority of the cohort was of Caucasian ethnicity (n = 336, 84.0%) and of Northwest European ancestry (n = 202, 50.5%), for 70 of whom (42.5%) an autochthonous Swiss descent was assumed. For WES filtering of rare, potentially actionable secondary variants in HBOC genes, an overall minor allele frequency (MAF) below 0.65% was used as cut-off. Each rare variant was manually evaluated according to the recommended ACGM-AMP standards, with some adaptations including "hypomorphic" as an additional distinct pathogenicity class.RESULTS: Overall, 526 rare secondary variants (339 different variants) were encountered, with the BRCA1/2 genes accounting for 27.2% of the total variant yield. If stratified for variant pathogenicity, for BRCA1/2, three pathogenic variants were found in three females of Italian ancestry (carrier frequency of 0.8%). In the non-BRCA genes, five carriers of (likely) pathogenic variants (1.3%) were identified, with two Swiss individuals harbouring the same CHEK2 Arg160Gly variant known to be recurrent among Caucasians. Hence, the overall carrier rate added up to 2.0%. Additionally, seven various hypomorphic HBOC predisposing alleles were detected in 22 individuals (5.5%). CONCLUSION:We provide the first evidence of a high prevalence of HBOC-related cancer susceptibility in the heterogeneous Swiss general population and relevant subpopulations, particularly in individuals of Italian descent. These pioneering data may substantiate population-based HBOC screening in Switzerland.
Next generation sequencing (NGS) can detect carrier status for rare recessive disorders, informing couples about their reproductive risk. The recent ACMG recommendations support offering NGS-based carrier screening (NGS-CS) in an ethnic and population-neutral manner for all genes that have a carrier frequency >1/200 (based on GnomAD). To evaluate current challenges for NGS-CS, we focused on the ciliopathies, a well-studied group of rare recessive disorders. We analyzed 118 ciliopathy genes by whole exome sequencing in ~400 healthy local individuals and ~1000 individuals from the UK1958-birth cohort. We found 20% of healthy individuals (1% of couples) to be carriers of reportable variants in a ciliopathy gene, while 50% (4% of couples) carry variants of uncertain significance (VUS). This large proportion of VUS is partly explained by the limited utility of the ACMG/AMP variant-interpretation criteria in healthy individuals, where phenotypic match or segregation criteria cannot be used. Most missense variants are thus classified as VUS and not reported, which reduces the negative predictive value of the screening test. We show how gene-specific variation patterns and structural protein information can help prioritize variants most likely to be disease-causing, for (future) functional assays. Even when considering only strictly pathogenic variants, the observed carrier frequency is substantially higher than expected based on estimated disease prevalence, challenging the 1/200 carrier frequency cut-off proposed for choice of genes to screen. Given the challenges linked to variant interpretation in healthy individuals and the uncertainties about true carrier frequencies, genetic counseling must clearly disclose these limitations of NGS-CS.
Large-scale next-generation sequencing (NGS) germline testing is technically feasible today, but variant interpretation represents a major bottleneck in analysis workflows including the extensive variant prioritization, annotation, and time-consuming evidence curation. The scale of the interpretation problem is massive, and variants of uncertain significance (VUS) are a challenge to personalized medicine. This challenge is further compounded by the complexity and heterogeneity of standards used to describe genetic variants and associated phenotypes when searching for relevant information to inform clinical decision-making. For this purpose, all five Swiss academic Medical Genetics Institutions joined forces with the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics (SIB) to create SwissGenVar as a user-friendly nationwide repository and sharing platform for genetic variant data generated during routine diagnostic procedures and research sequencing projects. Its objective is to provide a protected environment for expert evidence sharing about individual variants to harmonize and up-scale their significance interpretation at clinical grade following international standards. To corroborate the clinical assessment, the variant-related data are combined with consented high-quality clinical information. Broader visibility will be gained by interfacing with international databases, thus supporting global initiatives in personalized health care.
The magnitude of clinical utility of preconception expanded carrier screening (ECS) concerning its potential to reduce the risk of affected offspring is unknown. Since neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) in their offspring is a major concern of parents-to-be, we addressed the question of residual risk by assessing the risk-reduction potential for NDDs in a retrospective study investigating ECS with different criteria for gene selection and definition of pathogenicity. We used exome sequencing data from 700 parents of children with NDDs and blindly screened for carrier-alleles in up to 3046 recessive/X-linked genes. Depending on variant pathogenicity thresholds and gene content, NDD-risk-reduction potential was up to 43.5% in consanguineous, and 5.1% in nonconsanguineous couples. The risk-reduction-potential was compromised by underestimation of pathogenicity of missense variants (false-negative-rate 4.6%), inherited copy-number variants and compound heterozygosity of one inherited and one de novo variant (0.9% each). Adherence to the ACMG recommendations of restricting ECS to high-frequency genes in nonconsanguineous couples would more than halve the detectable inherited NDD-risk. Thus, for optimized clinical utility of ECS, screening in recessive/X-linked genes regardless of their frequency (ACMG Tier-4) and sensible pathogenicity thresholds should be considered for all couples seeking ECS.
OBJECTIVE: Cranial hemangiopericytomas are rare tumors of mesenchymal origin with a high proclivity towards recurrence and extraneural metastasis. Considering the paucity of reports dealing with the tumor genetics of cranial hemangiopericytomas and the still ongoing debate about their histological standing, we examined a series of 9 cranial hemangiopericytomas for the most important meningioma specific cytogenetic and epi-genetic aberrations. Furthermore, for the first time, whole genomic imbalances were assessed by chromosomal CGH analysis. MATERIAL AND METHODS: In a total of nine histopathologically confirmed CNS-hemangio-pericytomas, the promoter methylation status of p15(CDKN2B), p16INK4A, TIMP3, MGMT and NDRG2 genes were evaluated via MS-PCR and direct bisulfite sequencing, respectively. Furthermore, typical numerical chromosomal aberrations reported in meningiomas were investigated using two-color FISH on touchpreparations with locus specific probe pairs detecting 1p36/22q11, 14q24/ 18q21, and 9p21/10q23 (MetaSystems, Altlußheim, Germany). For CGH analysis, standard procedures were used. RESULTS: All studied cases presented with an unmethylated status of the p15, MGMT and TIMP3 promoters. One specimen was encountered with positive methylation signal for p16 in MS-PCR analysis. Direct bisulfite sequencing for NDRG2 revealed only in 1/6 cases a moderately elevated average methylation degree. In FISH analyses, disomy for all targeted chromosomal regions was found in 5/9 studied hemangiopericytoma specimens; in two tumors a slight clone with hemizygous loss of 10q23 was detected. In one other specimen, virtually all nuclei harbored a hemizygous deletion of 9p21. One further CNS-hemangiopericytoma was characterized by a tetraploid mainline with slight sidelines that contained trisomies of 9p21 and 10q23. CGH analysis revealed heterogeneous copy number changes for each of the nine hemangiopericytomas (8.2 alterations on average), involving all chromosomes besides chromosomes 14, 15, and 21. Most frequently, chromosomes 4 and 18 were affected by DNA changes. On subchromosomal level, most recurrent aberrations involved the exclusive gains on 7q11.2, 16p13.2 p13.3, and 18p11.3 as well as the exclusive segmental loss of 20q13.2 q13.3. CONCLUSIONs: Most CNS-hemangiopericytomas obviously lack meningioma specific epigenetic and molecular cytogenetic lesions, further providing evidence that they represent a distinct tumor entity with genetic different features. The present findings prompt one to speculate about the possible role of inactivation of p16INK4a and deletions on 10q in the underlying tumorigenesis of a distinct subgroup of CNS-hemangiopericytomas. By use of CGH analysis, novel regions of gains and losses were identified which will help to further elucidate potentially causal genetic events for genesis of cranial hemangiopericytomas.
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