4.5 Article

Whole-Genome Sequencing of Cytogenetically Balanced Chromosome Translocations Identifies Potentially Pathological Gene Disruptions and Highlights the Importance of Microhomology in the Mechanism of Formation

期刊

HUMAN MUTATION
卷 38, 期 2, 页码 180-192

出版社

WILEY-HINDAWI
DOI: 10.1002/humu.23146

关键词

balanced chromosomal aberration; reciprocal translocation; whole-genome sequencing; microhomology; nonhomologous end joining; replication-based repair mechanisms

资金

  1. Swedish Research Council [2012-1526, 2013-2603]
  2. Swedish Society for Medical Research
  3. Marianne and Marcus Wallenberg Foundation [2014.0084]
  4. Stockholm County Council
  5. Harald and Greta Jeanssons Foundation
  6. Ulf Lundahl memory fund through the Swedish Brain Foundation
  7. Erik Ronnberg Foundation
  8. US National Institutes of Health [HG006542]
  9. Novo Nordisk Fonden [NNF15OC0016398, NNF13OC0004915, NNF16OC0021322, NNF14OC0009813] Funding Source: researchfish

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Most balanced translocations are thought to result mechanistically from nonhomologous end joining or, in rare cases of recurrent events, by nonallelic homologous recombination. Here, we use low-coverage mate pair whole-genome sequencing to fine map rearrangement breakpoint junctions in both phenotypically normal and affected translocation carriers. In total, 46 junctions from 22 carriers of balanced translocations were characterized. Genes were disrupted in 48% of the breakpoints; recessive genes in four normal carriers and known dominant intellectual disability genes in three affected carriers. Finally, seven candidate disease genes were disrupted in five carriers with neurocognitive disabilities (SVOPL, SUSD1, TOX, NCALD, SLC4A10) and one XX-male carrier with Tourette syndrome (LYPD6, GPC5). Breakpoint junction analyses revealed microhomology and small templated insertions in a substantive fraction of the analyzed translocations (17.4%; n = 4); an observation that was substantiated by reanalysis of 37 previously published translocation junctions. Microhomology associated with templated insertions is a characteristic seen in the breakpoint junctions of rearrangements mediated by error-prone replication-based repair mechanisms. Our data implicate that a mechanism involving template switching might contribute to the formation of at least 15% of the interchromosomal translocation events.

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