4.6 Article

Molecular Challenges in the Diagnosis of X-Linked Chronic Granulomatous Disease: CNVs, Intronic Variants, Skewed X-Chromosome Inactivation, and Gonosomal Mosaicism

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10875-023-01556-x

Keywords

Chronic granulomatous disease; Copy number variation; X-chromosome inactivation; Intronic variants; Mosaicism; Next-generation sequencing

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) is an inborn error of immunity characterized by phagocytes' inability to produce reactive oxygen species, leading to dysregulated inflammatory responses and susceptibility to severe infections. The most common and severe form of CGD is X-linked CGD (XL-CGD), caused by mutations in the CYBB gene. This study illustrates the molecular challenges in the genetic diagnosis of XL-CGD through the analysis of three affected families, including heterozygous deletions of CYBB exon 13, hemizygous deletion of CYBB exon 7, and a novel intronic variant affecting splicing process.
Chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) is a prototypical inborn error of immunity affecting phagocytes, in which these cells are unable to produce reactive oxygen species. CGD is caused by defects in genes encoding subunits of the NADPH oxidase enzyme complex (CYBA, CYBB, CYBC1, NCF1, NCF2, NCF4); inflammatory responses are dysregulated, and patients are highly susceptible to recurrent severe bacterial and fungal infections. X-linked CGD (XL-CGD), caused by mutations in the CYBB gene, is the most common and severe form of CGD. In this study, we describe the analytical processes undertaken in 3 families affected with XL-CGD to illustrate several molecular challenges in the genetic diagnosis of this condition: in family 1, a girl with a heterozygous deletion of CYBB exon 13 and skewed X-chromosome inactivation (XCI); in family 2, a boy with a hemizygous deletion of CYBB exon 7, defining its consequences at the mRNA level; and in family 3, 2 boys with the same novel intronic variant in CYBB (c.1151 + 6 T > A). The variant affected the splicing process, although a small fraction of wild-type mRNA was produced. Their mother was a heterozygous carrier, while their maternal grandmother was a carrier in form of gonosomal mosaicism. In summary, using a variety of techniques, including an NGS-based targeted gene panel and deep amplicon sequencing, copy number variation calling strategies, microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization, and cDNA analysis to define splicing defects and skewed XCI, we show how to face and solve some uncommon genetic mechanisms in the diagnosis of XL-CGD.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available