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Penetrance, variable expressivity and monogenic neurodevelopmental disorders.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/194034
Date of Publication
June 2024
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Universitätsklinik fü...

Author
de Masfrand, Servane
Cogné, Benjamin
Nizon, Mathilde
Deb, Wallid
Goldenberg, Alice
Lecoquierre, François
Nicolas, Gaël
Bournez, Marie
Vitobello, Antonio
Mau-Them, Frédéric Tran
le Guyader, Gwenaël
Bilan, Frédéric
Bauer, Peter
Zweier, Christiane Gertrud
Universitätsklinik für Humangenetik
Piard, Juliette
Pasquier, Laurent
Bézieau, Stéphane
Gerard, Bénédicte
Faivre, Laurence
Saugier-Veber, Pascale
Piton, Amélie
Isidor, Bertrand
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
European journal of medical genetics
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1878-0849
Publisher
Elsevier
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1016/j.ejmg.2024.104932
PubMed ID
38453051
Uncontrolled Keywords

Incomplete penetrance...

Description
PURPOSE

Incomplete penetrance is observed for most monogenic diseases. However, for neurodevelopmental disorders, the interpretation of single and multi-nucleotide variants (SNV/MNVs) is usually based on the paradigm of complete penetrance.

METHOD

From 2020 to 2022, we proposed a collaboration study with the French molecular diagnosis for intellectual disability network. The aim was to recruit families for whom the index case, diagnosed with a neurodevelopmental disorder, was carrying a pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant for an OMIM morbid gene and inherited from an asymptomatic parent. Grandparents were analyzed when available for segregation study.

RESULTS

We identified 12 patients affected by a monogenic neurodevelopmental disorder caused by likely pathogenic or pathogenic variant (SNV/MNV) inherited from an asymptomatic parent. These genes were usually associated with de novo variants. The patients carried different variants (1 splice-site variant, 4 nonsense and 7 frameshift) in 11 genes: CAMTA1, MBD5, KMT2C, KMT2E, ZMIZ1, MN1, NDUFB11, CUL3, MED13, ARID2 and RERE. Grandparents have been tested in 6 families, and each time the variant was confirmed de novo in the healthy carrier parent.

CONCLUSION

Incomplete penetrance for SNV and MNV in neurodevelopmental disorders might be more frequent than previously thought. This point is crucial to consider for interpretation of variants, family investigation, genetic counseling, and prenatal diagnosis. Molecular mechanisms underlying this incomplete penetrance still need to be identified.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/175347
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