학술논문

Computational Prediction of Position Effects of Apparently Balanced Human Chromosomal Rearrangements
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Human Genetics. 101(2)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Genetics
Human Genome
Clinical Research
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Chromosomal Position Effects
Chromosome Breakpoints
Chromosome Mapping
Chromosomes
Human
Gene Expression Regulation
Gene Rearrangement
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Genetic Variation
Genome
Human
Humans
In Situ Hybridization
Fluorescence
Karyotype
Phenotype
Translocation
Genetic
HPO
balanced chromosomal rearrangement
chromatin conformation
chromosomal rearrangement
chromosomal translocation
clinical genetics
cytogenetics
diagnosis
distal effect
long-range effect
Medical and Health Sciences
Genetics & Heredity
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
Interpretation of variants of uncertain significance, especially chromosomal rearrangements in non-coding regions of the human genome, remains one of the biggest challenges in modern molecular diagnosis. To improve our understanding and interpretation of such variants, we used high-resolution three-dimensional chromosomal structural data and transcriptional regulatory information to predict position effects and their association with pathogenic phenotypes in 17 subjects with apparently balanced chromosomal abnormalities. We found that the rearrangements predict disruption of long-range chromatin interactions between several enhancers and genes whose annotated clinical features are strongly associated with the subjects' phenotypes. We confirm gene-expression changes for a couple of candidate genes to exemplify the utility of our analysis of position effect. These results highlight the important interplay between chromosomal structure and disease and demonstrate the need to utilize chromatin conformational data for the prediction of position effects in the clinical interpretation of non-coding chromosomal rearrangements.