Identification of an 85-kb Heterozygous 4p Microdeletion With Full Genome Analysis in Autosomal Dominant Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease.
Journal
Neurology. Genetics
Journal Volume
9
Journal Issue
4
Start Page
e200078
ISSN
2376-7839
Date Issued
2023-08
Author(s)
Hsueh, Hsueh Wen
Kao, Hsiao-Jung
Chao, Chi-Chao
Hsueh, Sung-Ju
Huang, Yu-Ning
Lin, Wan-Jia
Su, Jen-Ping
Shy, Horng-Tzer
Yeh, Ti-Yen
Lin, Cheng-Chen
Kwok, Pui-Yan
Lee, Ni-Chung
Abstract
Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) is a syndrome of a hereditary neurodegenerative condition affecting the peripheral nervous system and is a single gene disorder. Deep phenotyping coupled with advanced genetic techniques is critical in discovering new genetic defects of rare genetic disorders such as CMT.MethodsWe applied multidisciplinary investigations to examine the neurophysiology and nerve pathology in a family that fulfilled the diagnosis of CMT2. When phenotype-guided first-tier genetic tests and whole-exome sequencing did not yield a molecular diagnosis, we conducted full genome analysis by examining phased whole-genome sequencing and whole-genome optical mapping data to search for the causal variation. We then performed a systematic review to compare the reported patients with interstitial microdeletion in the short arm of chromosome 4.ResultsIn this family with CMT2, we reported the discovery of a heterozygous 85-kb microdeletion in the short arm of chromosome 4 (4p16.3)[NC_000004.12:g.1733926_1819031del] spanning 3 genes [TACC3 (intron 6-exon 16), FGFR3 (total deletion), and LETM1 (intron 10-exon14)] that cosegregated with disease phenotypes in family members. The clinical features of peripheral nerve degeneration in our family are distinct from the well-known 4p microdeletion syndrome of Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome, in which brain involvement is the major phenotype.DiscussionIn summary, we used the full genome analysis approach to discover a new microdeletion in a family with CMT2. The deleted segment contains 3 genes (TACC3, FGFR3, and LETM1) that likely play a role in the pathogenesis of nerve degeneration.
Type
journal article