CNVs cause autosomal recessive genetic diseases with or without involvement of SNV/indels

Genet Med. 2020 Oct;22(10):1633-1641. doi: 10.1038/s41436-020-0864-8. Epub 2020 Jun 24.

Abstract

Purpose: Improved resolution of molecular diagnostic technologies enabled detection of smaller sized exonic level copy-number variants (CNVs). The contribution of CNVs to autosomal recessive (AR) conditions may be better recognized using a large clinical cohort.

Methods: We retrospectively investigated the CNVs' contribution to AR conditions in cases subjected to chromosomal microarray analysis (CMA, N = ~70,000) and/or clinical exome sequencing (ES, N = ~12,000) at Baylor Genetics; most had pediatric onset neurodevelopmental disorders.

Results: CNVs contributed to biallelic variations in 87 cases, including 81 singletons and three affected sibling pairs. Seventy cases had CNVs affecting both alleles, and 17 had a CNV and a single-nucleotide variant (SNV)/indel in trans. In total, 94.3% of AR-CNVs affected one gene; among these 41.4% were single-exon and 35.0% were multiexon partial-gene events. Sixty-nine percent of homozygous AR-CNVs were embedded in homozygous genomic intervals. Five cases had large deletions unmasking an SNV/indel on the intact allele for a recessive condition, resulting in multiple molecular diagnoses.

Conclusions: AR-CNVs are often smaller in size, transmitted through generations, and underrecognized due to limitations in clinical CNV detection methods. Our findings from a large clinical cohort emphasized integrated CNV and SNV/indel analyses for precise clinical and molecular diagnosis especially in the context of genomic disorders.

Keywords: SNV/indel; autosomal recessive; clinical molecular diagnoses; copy-number variants; multiple molecular diagnoses.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • DNA Copy Number Variations* / genetics
  • Exome Sequencing
  • Exons
  • Humans
  • INDEL Mutation*
  • Retrospective Studies