This study was aimed at assessing the diagnostic utility of whole genome sequence analysis in a well-characterised research cohort of individuals referred with a clinical suspicion of Cornelia de Lang Show more
This study was aimed at assessing the diagnostic utility of whole genome sequence analysis in a well-characterised research cohort of individuals referred with a clinical suspicion of Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) in whom prior genetic testing had not identified a causative variant. Short-read whole genome sequencing was performed on 195 individuals from 105 families, 108 of whom were affected. 100/108 of the affected individuals had prior relevant genetic testing, with no pathogenic variant being identified. The study group comprised 42 trios in which both parental samples were available for testing (42 affected individuals and 126 unaffected parents), 61 singletons (unrelated affected individuals), and two families with more than one affected individual. The results showed that 32 unrelated probands from 105 families (30.5%) had likely causative coding region-disrupting variants. Four loci were identified in > 1 proband: Show less
Tissue-specific integrative omics has the potential to reveal new genic elements important for developmental disorders. Two pediatric patients with global developmental delay and intellectual disabili Show more
Tissue-specific integrative omics has the potential to reveal new genic elements important for developmental disorders. Two pediatric patients with global developmental delay and intellectual disability phenotype underwent array-CGH genetic testing, both showing a partial deletion of the DLG2 gene. From independent human and murine omics datasets, we combined copy number variations, histone modifications, developmental tissue-specific regulation, and protein data to explore the molecular mechanism at play. Integrating genomics, transcriptomics, and epigenomics data, we describe two novel DLG2 promoters and coding first exons expressed in human fetal brain. Their murine conservation and protein-level evidence allowed us to produce new DLG2 gene models for human and mouse. These new genic elements are deleted in 90% of 29 patients (public and in-house) showing partial deletion of the DLG2 gene. The patients' clinical characteristics expand the neurodevelopmental phenotypic spectrum linked to DLG2 gene disruption to cognitive and behavioral categories. While protein-coding genes are regarded as well known, our work shows that integration of multiple omics datasets can unveil novel coding elements. From a clinical perspective, our work demonstrates that two new DLG2 promoters and exons are crucial for the neurodevelopmental phenotypes associated with this gene. In addition, our work brings evidence for the lack of cross-annotation in human versus mouse reference genomes and nucleotide versus protein databases. Show less