학술논문

Reanalysis of exome sequencing data reveals a treatable neurometabolic origin in two previously undiagnosed siblings with neurodevelopmental disorder.
Document Type
Article
Source
Neurological Sciences. Jul2023, Vol. 44 Issue 7, p2527-2540. 14p. 1 Black and White Photograph, 1 Diagram, 2 Charts, 2 Graphs.
Subject
*INBORN errors of metabolism
*NEURAL development
*FOLINIC acid
*FOLIC acid
*NUCLEOTIDE sequencing
Language
ISSN
1590-1874
Abstract
Neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) have broad heterogeneity both clinically and genetically. Inborn errors of metabolism can be one of the reasons of neurodevelopmental disruption causing specific NDDs. Although there is tremendous advance in molecular identification via next-generation sequencing (NGS), there are still many unsolved patients with NDD. Reanalysis of NGS data with different pipelines can at least partially accomplish this challenge. Herein, we report clinic and genetic components of an adult sib-pair with an undiagnosed NDD condition, which has been solved through reanalysis of whole-exome sequencing (WES). Parallel analysis of SNP-based genotyping and WES was performed to focus on variants only in loci with positive logarithm of the odds scores. WES data was analyzed through three different pipelines with two distinct bed files. Reanalysis of WES data led us to detect a homozygous FOLR1 variant (ENST00000393676.5:c.610C > T, p.(Arg204Ter), rs952165627) in the affected sib-pair. Surprisingly, the variant could not be detected in the first analysis as the variant region is not included in the first bed file which may frequently be used. Biochemical tests of CSF have confirmed the genetic analysis, CSF folic acid levels were detected low in sib-pair, and intravenous folinic acid treatment improved the disease course for the first 6 months of follow-up even at late diagnosis age. Although combined analysis of SNP-based genotyping and WES is a powerful tool to reveal the genetic components of heterogeneous diseases, reanalysis of genome data still should be considered in unsolved patients. Also, biochemical screening helps us to decipher undiagnosed NDD that may be a treatable neurometabolic condition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]