Saito Kayoko
   Department   School of Medicine(Tokyo Women's Medical University Hospital), School of Medicine
   Position   Professor (Fixed Term)
Article types Original article
Language English
Peer review Peer reviewed
Title Analysis of spinal muscular atrophy-like patients by targeted resequencing.
Journal Formal name:Brain & development
Abbreviation:Brain Dev
ISSN code:18727131/03877604
Volume, Issue, Page 42(2),pp.148-156
Author and coauthor Hosokawa Shinichi, Kubo Yuji, Arakawa Reiko, Takashima Hiroshi, Saito Kayoko
Publication date 2020/02
Summary BACKGROUND:Several effective therapies have been developed for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), but there are multiple diseases that show SMA-like symptoms, necessitating efficient differential genetic diagnostic methods. Advancements in next-generation sequencing (NGS) technology have facilitated the successful diagnosis of many undiagnosed genetic diseases. Here, we applied NGS along with conventional methods for the molecular diagnosis of undiagnosed patients with lower motor neuron (LMN) symptoms who were initially suspected to have SMA.METHODS:We enrolled 157 patients with LMN symptoms who visited the Institute of Medical Genetics, Tokyo Women's Medical University, between 2005 and 2016. We excluded 86 patients diagnosed with SMA after confirming the causative SMN1 gene deletion or variants. Finally, we examined 12 undiagnosed patients from eight families by targeted resequencing using NGS. Variants were selected on the basis of literature search and databases, and mutations in a gene where loss of function is a known mechanism of disease were considered as pathogenic. Candidate variants were validated by Sanger sequencing.RESULTS:We detected novel variants for three patients from two families. Patients 1 and 2 (siblings) showed compound heterozygous TTN variants (c.6621delG, p.W2207Cfs*28 and c.23718T>A, p.F7906L), while patient 3 displayed compound heterozygous KIF1A variants of (c.3871C>T, p.R1291C and c.3898G>A, p.V1300M).CONCLUSIONS:We detected appropriate variants using our approach of obtaining candidate pathogenic variants by targeted resequencing through NGS and narrowed down the variants in light of patient clinical symptoms. We successfully identified novel causative variants in three undiagnosed patients, which indicated the effectiveness of our approach.
DOI 10.1016/j.braindev.2019.10.008
PMID 31734026