18.03.20 Microdup/del syndromes Flashcards
What are the different pathological mechanisms by which microdeletion/duplication syndromes can result in disease.
- Haploinsufficiency
- Affects imprinted genes
- Recessive mutation is unmasked
- Position effect
- Trisomy for duplicated segment
What are the two forms of syndrome associated with microdeletions and duplications? Give an example of each.
- Single gene (Mendelian) syndrome – The phenotypic effects are due to the deletion/duplication of a single dosage-sensitive gene (e.g. Alagille syndrome, JAG1; CMT1A/HNPP, PMP22; Rubinstein-Taybi, CBP; Neurofibromatosis type 1, NF1). Neighbouring genes may also be deleted/duplicated, but as they are not dosage-sensitive they do not contribute to the phenotype.
- Contiguous gene syndrome – A specific recognisable phenotype results from the loss or gain of multiple adjacent genes, some of which are dosage-sensitive (e.g. WAGR, Williams syndrome, DiGeorge/VCFS).
What is the common basis for many microdeletion/duplication syndromes?
low copy repeats
What are low copy repeats and which mechanism are they involved in which leads to microdeletion/duplications?
LCRs: DNA blocks of ~10-400kb with a high degree of homology (>97%) that occur multiple times throughout the genome and enable the erroneous coming-together of different chromosome regions during meiosis.
The misaligned repeats have the same sequence but not the same chromosomal location, so recombination is homologous but the sequences are not alleles. Hence this process is known as non-allelic homologous recombination (NAHR).
This mechanism generates many common non-pathogenic CNVs as well as pathogenic variations in gene dosage.
What are the different outcomes of LCR/NAHR-based mechanism?
Depending on whether the NAHR is between LCRs on two homologous chromosomes (interchromosomal), on the chromatids of the same chromosome (intrachromosomal) or on the same chromatid (intrachromatid), as well as on the orientation and complexity of the LCRs, the outcomes vary (deletions/duplications/ inversions/isodicentric chromosomes).
What are NAHR hotspots?
NAHR hotspots are positions within LCRs where crossovers preferentially occur, and rearrangement breakpoints are typically found.
Hotspots are usually in regions of identical nucleotide sequence at least ~200-450bp long. Because breakpoints cluster within defined regions at NAHR hotspots, the extent of many recurrent CNVs is essentially identical even in unrelated individuals.
What is the minimal efficient processing segment?
The minimal efficient processing segment (MEPS) is the minimal stretch of identity required to enable homologous recombination.
The length of MEPS can be different between meiosis (~300-500bp) and mitosis (possibly shorter) and between different events.
The distance between LCRs could play a role in determining the lenth of the MEPs (the further away the LCRs, the longer the MEPs).
Why do many microduplication syndromes remain undiagnosed?
microduplications generally result in a milder, more benign phenotype than microdeletions, since trisomy is usually better tolerated than monosomy.
In addition, some techniques such as FISH are far less sensitive at detecting microduplications than microdeletions, which may contribute to some going unidentified (although this is not the case for arrays, now more commonly used).
Which factors influence reduced penetrance and variable expressivity in microdeletion/duplication syndromes?
- Variable breakpoints
- Differences in genetic background: additional variants (both common and rare) that modify expression
- Unmasking of recessive variants on the second allele (or a “second hit” variant)
- Epigenetic modifications, imprinting (e.g PWS/AS region)
How has the discovery of microdeletion/duplication syndromes changed?
Early discoveries of microdeletion and microduplication syndromes relied on common clinical presentation (“phenotype-first” discovery), and the ability to detect chromosomal abnormalities by standard karyotype.
However many microdeletion/microduplications are relatively small (<5-10 Mb) and so would require high resolution banding, with many not visible at all (these would require detection by targeted methods e.g. FISH).
The switch to frontline microarrays (and increasingly, next generation sequencing) has since allowed more comprehensive and unbiased discovery of novel microdeletions and microduplications (including very rare rearrangements), with common phenotypic features identified after the fact.
Give an example of disorders caused by reciprocal microduplication/microdeletion resulting from NAHR.
1) CMT1A and HNPP are caused by a reciprocal 1.4Mb duplication/deletion encompassing the dosage-sensitive PMP22 gene at 17p11.2. The recurrent deletion/duplication results from NAHR between two LCRs known as CMT1A-REPs. The two CMT1A-REP copies share 24,011bp of 98.7% sequence identity.
2) SMS and PTLS are caused by recurrent 3.7Mb deletion/duplications generated by NAHR between LCRs. Three ~250kb LCRs are present: distal (D), middle (M) and proximal (P) SMS-REPs. The SMS-REPM is inverted in orientation. The common ~4Mb del/dup occurs due to NAHR between the SMS-REPD and P. Smaller deletions occur by NAHR between the SMS-REPD and M.
Give an overview of SMS, including incidence.
SMS is characterized by:
- distinctive facial features (brachycephaly, broad face with synophrys and tented upper lip, brachydactyly),
- short stature
- developmental delay
- cognitive impairment
- hypotonia in infancy
- behavioural abnormalities including sleep disturbance, sterotypies, tantrums and self-injurious behaviour.
SMS results from deletions of 17p11.2 (70% of those affected) as well as loss of function point mutations in the critical gene RAI1.
The incidence of SMS is estimated to be 1:25,000 births. Virtually all cases of SMS occur de novo.
Give an overview of PTLS.
PTLS is a neurological disorder associated with mild intellectual disability, developmental delay, autistic features, hypotonia and failure to thrive in infancy. Most cases of PTLS result from de novo duplications of the same 17p11.2 region involved in SMS.
Which microdeletion is associated with Williams syndrome? What is the mechanism underlying this recurrent deletion?
1) contiguous gene deletion of the Williams-Beuren syndrome critical region (WBSCR) at 7q11.23
2) ) that encompasses a number of genes implicated in the phenotype e.g. the elastin gene (ELN) is responsible for connective tissue abnormalities and CV disease.
The WBSCR is flanked by low copy repeats that predispose to NAHR. In 95% of individuals with WS the deletion comprises 1.55 Mb; in 5% it comprises 1.84 Mb. The size of deletion reflects which LCR blocks are involved
What is the incidence of Williams syndrome
1 in 7500
Most cases are de novo occurrences, but occasionally, parent-to-child transmission is observed.
In approximately 25% of cases, the unaffected parent in whom the chromosome deletion originated has a paracentric inversion on chromosome 7 involving the WBSCR.