| Name: | Description: | Size: | Format: | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 65.41 KB | Adobe PDF |
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Introduction: The proximal region 15q11q14 is one of the most unstable regions in
the human genome, with six recognizable break points (BP1-BP6). In 15q13.3 there is
a recurrent small CNV (BP4-BP5) consisting of a 350-680 Kb duplication,
encompassing the CHRNA7 gene, which encodes the alpha 7 subunit of the neuronal
nicotinic acetylcholine receptor.
Although microdeletions of CHRNA7 are known to cause intellectual disability and
neuropsychiatric phenotypes with high penetrance, the patogenicity of CHRNA7
duplications remains unclear. Microduplication 15q13.3 seems to be associated with a
phenotypic spectrum of cognitive impairment and neuropsychiatric/neurobehavioral
disorders. However, the penetrance of this CNV is considered incomplete since it is
present in clinically unaffected individuals in the general population and it is frequently
inherited from apparently clinically normal parents. Nonetheless, some pedigree
studies have found a history of neuropsychiatric problems among carrier family
members.
This study aimed at re-evaluating the dup 15q13.3 CNV in national laboratories.
Materials and Methods: Our study collected data on 15q13.3 microduplications in
eight Portuguese genetics laboratories, among subjects referred for microarray.
Results: Here we present a total of seventeen cases with dup 15q13.3. The subjects
had somewhat variable phenotypes, with a bias towards developmental delay and
autism spectrum disorders. Inheritance was established for eight of the subjects, and
the majority originated from the father. We had no access to clinical data on carrier
parents. No de novo CNV was found. All laboratories involved classified this variant as
of uncertain significance.
Discussion/Conclusion: To better determine whether this CNV is benign or
pathogenic, careful characterization of patient and control cohorts must be performed,
including detailed patient phenotyping, inheritance, clinical evaluation of carrier
parents, prevalence in controls, as well as genetic functional studies.
We strongly support the creation of a national database for uncertain CNVs in order to
clarify the relevance of these recurrent findings, allowing a definitive classification in
either pathogenic or benign.
Description
Keywords
Doenças Genéticas 15q13.3 Duplicação CNV National Data Collection
