Whole exome sequencing as a diagnostic tool for patients with ciliopathy-like phenotypes
Research Abstract
Abstract
Ciliopathies are a group of rare disorders characterized by a high genetic and phenotypic
variability, which complicates their molecular diagnosis. Hence the need to use the latest
powerful approaches to faster identify the genetic defect in these patients. We applied
whole exome sequencing to six consanguineous families clinically diagnosed with ciliopathy-
like disease, and for which mutations in predominant Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS)
genes had previously been excluded. Our strategy, based on first applying several filters to
ciliary variants and using many of the bioinformatics tools available, allowed us to identify
causal mutations in BBS2, ALMS1 and CRB1 genes in four families, thus confirming the
molecular diagnosis of ciliopathy. In the remaining two families, after first rejecting the presence
of pathogenic variants in common cilia-related genes, we adopted a new filtering strategy
combined with prioritisation tools to rank the final candidate genes for each case. Thus,
we propose CORO2B, LMO7 and ZNF17 as novel candidate ciliary genes, but further functional
studies will be needed to confirm their role. Our data show the usefulness of this strategy
to diagnose patients with unclear phenotypes, and therefore the success of applying
such technologies to achieve a rapid and reliable molecular diagnosis, improving genetic
counselling for these patients. In addition, the described pipeline also highlights the common
pitfalls associated to the large volume of data we have to face and the difficulty of assigning
a functional role to these changes, hence the importance of designing the most appropriate
strategy according to each case.
Research Keywords
Gene, ciliopathy, BBS, cilia