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Genetic modifiers and ascertainment drive variable expressivity of complex disorders.

Authors :
Jensen M
Smolen C
Tyryshkina A
Pizzo L
Banerjee D
Oetjens M
Shimelis H
Taylor CM
Pounraja VK
Song H
Rohan L
Huber E
El Khattabi L
van de Laar I
Tadros R
Bezzina C
van Slegtenhorst M
Kammeraad J
Prontera P
Caberg JH
Fraser H
Banka S
Van Dijck A
Schwartz C
Voorhoeve E
Callier P
Mosca-Boidron AL
Marle N
Lefebvre M
Pope K
Snell P
Boys A
Lockhart PJ
Ashfaq M
McCready E
Nowacyzk M
Castiglia L
Galesi O
Avola E
Mattina T
Fichera M
Bruccheri MG
Mandarà GML
Mari F
Privitera F
Longo I
Curró A
Renieri A
Keren B
Charles P
Cuinat S
Nizon M
Pichon O
Bénéteau C
Stoeva R
Martin-Coignard D
Blesson S
Le Caignec C
Mercier S
Vincent M
Martin C
Mannik K
Reymond A
Faivre L
Sistermans E
Kooy RF
Amor DJ
Romano C
Andrieux J
Girirajan S
Source :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences [medRxiv] 2024 Aug 28. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Aug 28.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Variable expressivity of disease-associated variants implies a role for secondary variants that modify clinical features. We assessed the effects of modifier variants towards clinical outcomes of 2,252 individuals with primary variants. Among 132 families with the 16p12.1 deletion, distinct rare and common variant classes conferred risk for specific developmental features, including short tandem repeats for neurological defects and SNVs for microcephaly, while additional disease-associated variants conferred multiple genetic diagnoses. Within disease and population cohorts of 773 individuals with the 16p12.1 deletion, we found opposing effects of secondary variants towards clinical features across ascertainments. Additional analysis of 1,479 probands with other primary variants, such as 16p11.2 deletion and CHD8 variants, and 1,084 without primary variants, showed that phenotypic associations differed by primary variant context and were influenced by synergistic interactions between primary and secondary variants. Our study provides a paradigm to dissect the genomic architecture of complex disorders towards personalized treatment.<br />Competing Interests: DECLARATION OF INTERESTS The authors declare no competing interests.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39252907
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.08.27.24312158