作者
Danny E. Miller,Arvis Sulovari,Tianyun Wang,Hailey Loucks,Kendra Hoekzema,Katherine M. Munson,Alexandra P. Lewis,Edith P. Almanza Fuerte,Catherine R. Paschal,Tom Walsh,Jenny Thies,James T. Bennett,Ian A. Glass,Katrina M. Dipple,Karynne Patterson,Emily Bonkowski,Zoe Nelson,Audrey Squire,Megan Sikes,Erika Beckman,Robin L. Bennett,Dawn Earl,Winston Lee,Rando Allikmets,Seth J. Perlman,Penny Chow,Anne V. Hing,Tara L. Wenger,Margaret P Adam,Angela Sun,Christina Lam,Irene J. Chang,Xue-Bin Zou,Stephanie Austin,Erin Huggins,Alexias Safi,Apoorva K Iyengar,Timothy E. Reddy,William H. Majoros,Andrew S. Allen,Gregory E. Crawford,Priya S. Kishnani,Mary‐Claire King,Tim Cherry,Jessica X. Chong,Michael J. Bamshad,Deborah A. Nickerson,Heather C Mefford,Dan Doherty,Evan E. Eichler
摘要
Despite widespread clinical genetic testing, many individuals with suspected genetic conditions lack a precise diagnosis, limiting their opportunity to take advantage of state-of-the-art treatments. In some cases, testing reveals difficult-to-evaluate structural differences, candidate variants that do not fully explain the phenotype, single pathogenic variants in recessive disorders, or no variants in genes of interest. Thus, there is a need for better tools to identify a precise genetic diagnosis in individuals when conventional testing approaches have been exhausted. We performed targeted long-read sequencing (T-LRS) using adaptive sampling on the Oxford Nanopore platform on 40 individuals, 10 of whom lacked a complete molecular diagnosis. We computationally targeted up to 151 Mbp of sequence per individual and searched for pathogenic substitutions, structural variants, and methylation differences using a single data source. We detected all genomic aberrations-including single-nucleotide variants, copy number changes, repeat expansions, and methylation differences-identified by prior clinical testing. In 8/8 individuals with complex structural rearrangements, T-LRS enabled more precise resolution of the mutation, leading to changes in clinical management in one case. In ten individuals with suspected Mendelian conditions lacking a precise genetic diagnosis, T-LRS identified pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants in six and variants of uncertain significance in two others. T-LRS accurately identifies pathogenic structural variants, resolves complex rearrangements, and identifies Mendelian variants not detected by other technologies. T-LRS represents an efficient and cost-effective strategy to evaluate high-priority genes and regions or complex clinical testing results.