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Diagnosing pediatric mitochondrial disease: lessons from 2,000 exomes

Authors :
Husain Ra
Thomas Meitinger
Wilichowski E
Robert Kopajtich
Smirnov D
Ewa Pronicka
Christine Makowski
Elżbieta Ciara
Michael Wagner
Felix Distelmaier
René Santer
Olsen R
Wolstein T
Theresa Brunet
Muller-Felber W
Buchner B
Wolfgang Sperl
Maja Hempel
Stefan Kölker
Dominic Lenz
Sarah L. Stenton
Saskia B. Wortmann
Leiz S
Kei Murayama
Munoz-Pujol G
Konstantopoulou
Xu M
Tobias B. Haack
Tim M. Strom
Riccardo Berutti
Tsygankova P
Lim Az
Daniele Ghezzi
Robert McFarland
Deen D
Kotzaeridou U
Daniela Karall
Ardissone A
Charlotte L. Alston
Markus Schuelke
Thomas Klopstock
Peter Freisinger
Robert W. Taylor
Ban R
Verloo P
van Coster R
Shimura M
Agnès Rötig
Dariusz Rokicki
Yepez
Mandel H
Akira Ohtake
Angela Pyle
Yasushi Okazaki
Mirjana Gusic
Antonia Ribes
Costanza Lamperti
Fang F
Holger Prokisch
von Kleist-Retzow J
Ivo Barić
Julien Gagneur
Bader Alhaddad
Dorota Piekutowska-Abramczuk
Johannes A. Mayr
Michael Zech
Frederic Tort
Schiff M
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

BackgroundThe spectrum of mitochondrial disease is genetically and phenotypically diverse, resulting from pathogenic variants in over 400 genes, with aerobic energy metabolism defects as a common denominator. Such heterogeneity poses a significant challenge in making an accurate diagnosis, critical for precision medicine.MethodsIn an international collaboration initiated by the European Network for Mitochondrial Diseases (GENOMIT) we recruited 2,023 pediatric patients at 11 specialist referral centers between October 2010 and January 2021, accumulating exome sequencing and HPO-encoded phenotype data. An exome-wide search for variants in known and potential novel disease genes, complemented by functional studies, followed ACMG guidelines.Results1,109 cases (55%) received a molecular diagnosis, of which one fifth have potential disease-modifying treatments (236/1,109, 21%). Functional studies enabled diagnostic uplift from 36% to 55% and discovery of 62 novel disease genes. Pathogenic variants were identified within genes encoding mitochondrial proteins or RNAs in 801 cases (72%), while, given extensive phenotype overlap, the remainder involved proteins targeted to other cellular compartments. To delineate genotype-phenotype associations, our data was complemented with registry and literature data to develop “GENOMITexplorer”, an open access resource detailing patient- (n=3,940), gene- (n=427), and variant-level (n=1,492) associations (prokischlab.github.io/GENOMITexplorer/).ConclusionsReaching a molecular diagnosis was essential for implementation of precision medicine and clinical trial eligibility, underlining the need for genome-wide screening given inability to accurately define mitochondrial diseases clinically. Key to diagnostic success were functional studies, encouraging early acquisition of patient- derived tissues and routine integration of high-throughput functional data to improve patient care by uplifting diagnostic rate.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........477c1c8ee5e39ca98f55206e438dd9a3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.06.21.21259171