Abstract
The protein O-mannose beta-1,2-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase 1 (POMGNT1) gene is one of 18 genes involved in the pathogenesis of α-dystroglycanopathies(α-DGPs) such as muscle–eye–brain disease (MEB). Our study aimed to retrospectively analyze and characterize the clinical and genetic features of three MEB patients with POMGNT1 mutations. One female and two male patients from three unrelated families were diagnosed with MEB, manifesting hypotonia at birth, mental retardation, structural brain defects, and ocular malformations. The novel missense mutations c.296 T > C and c.794 G > C were revealed in patient 2 and patient 3 respectively by next-generation sequencing (NGS). Further NGS data analysis revealed that all three patients had the same novel copy number variations (CNV) g.6668-8257del, which was homozygous in patient 1 and heterozygous in patients 2 and 3. By long-range polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and Sanger sequencing, it was shown that the two breakpoints of the CNV localized to two AluY elements and displayed 42-bp of microhomology. The CNV was confirmed as a founder mutation by haplotype analysis. Our study indicated that NGS is a clinically useful method of detecting α-DGPs genes -related CNV, and the CNV is likely to be caused by Alu-Alu recombination or from a single ancestor bearing the deletion chromosome.
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Introduction
The protein O-mannose beta-1,2-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase 1 (POMGNT1) is one of the pathogenic genes of α-dystroglycanopathies (α-DGPs) which are caused by glycosylation defects of α-dystroglycan (α-DG)1, 2. α-DGPs are a heterogeneous group of muscular dystrophies with autosomal recessive inheritance3, and α-DGPs have been renamed muscular dystrophy-dystroglycanopathies (MDDG). Current known MDDG types are from A (most severe) to C (least severe). Until now, 18 genes had been discovered to be pathogenic for α-DGPs, including the following: POMT1(OMIM #607423), POMT2(OMIM #607439), POMGNT1(OMIM #606822), FKTN(OMIM #607440), FKRP(OMIM #606596), LARGE(OMIM #603590), GTDC2/POMGNT2(OMIM #614828), B3GALNT2(OMIM #610194), B3GNT1(OMIM #605517), SGK196/POMK(OMIM #615247), TMEM5(OMIM #605862), GMPPB(OMIM #615320), DPM1(OMIM #603503), DPM2(OMIM #603564), DPM3(OMIM #605951), DOLK(OMIM #610746), ISPD(OMIM #614631), and DAG1(OMIM #128239)4. Mutations in the POMGNT1 are responsible for several forms of α-DGPs such as Walker–Warburg syndrome (WWS, OMIM #253280, renamed MDDGA3)5, muscle–eye–brain disease (MEB, OMIM #253280, renamed MDDGA3)1, congenital muscular dystrophy with mental retardation (OMIM #613151, renamed MDDGB3)6, and limb girdle muscular dystrophy type 2 O (LGMD2O, OMIM #613157, renamed MDDGC3)7. Additionally, it has been reported that mutations in the POMGNT1 can cause retinitis pigmentosa-76 (RP76, OMIM#606822)8, 9. With the broad clinical application of next-generation sequencing (NGS), more and more patients with different phenotypes have been diagnosed with α-DGPs10. However, molecular diagnosis by NGS is not always successful because the disease may be caused by as of yet undiscovered genes or sequencing of the known genes might be incomplete. To resolve the latter problem, we analyze the number of sequence reads of patients along with control samples from NGS, and we report here a novel copy number variation (CNV) of the POMGNT1 in three MEB patients from three unrelated families. To our knowledge, this is the first study to describe NGS as a tool for identifying CNV of α-DGPs genes. Furthermore, two possible causes of this CNV were discussed as Alu-Alu recombination and founder mutation.
Results
Phenotypic features of patients
Patient 1
Patient 1 was an 8-year-5-month-old male, who displayed significant motor and cognitive developmental delay with mental retardation. He was the second child, born at full-term to a healthy woman by normal spontaneous vaginal delivery, with a birth weight of 2.5 kg. He had an unaffected older sister. His parents were consanguineous Han from Gansu Province. The mother’s history included two spontaneous abortions. 24 weeks into the mother’s fifth pregnancy, fetal hydrocephalus was detected and the parents selected termination of pregnancy (Pedigree shown in Supplementary Figure S1). Patient 1 had never achieved head control or the ability to sit unsupported. He could turn over by himself when he was 5 years old. He could neither speak nor communicate with others. Upon physical examination, he showed a myopathic face, a high-arched palate, nystagmus, generalized muscle weakness, and marked hypotonia. Deep tendon reflexes were absent. Both knee and ankle joint contractures were present. Right Babinski sign was positive, and left Babinski was probable positive. Ophthalmic examination demonstrated microphthalmia, microcornea, right cataract, left severe myopia, left optic nerve atrophy, and left retinal dysplasia (Fig. 1). The serum CK level was 1514 U/L. The brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed micropolygyria, septum pellucidum absence, corpus callosum dysplasia, cerebellum hypoplasia, and cerebellar cysts. The brain MRI also showed right microphthalmus, amotio retinae, and irregular shape of the left eye (Fig. 2).
Patient 2
Patient 2, a 3-year-1-month-old male with motor and cognitive delay, was the first child, born at full-term to a healthy woman, with a birth weight of 2.8 kg. His parents were non-consanguineous Han from Anhui Province (Pedigree shown in Supplementary Figure S1). He achieved head control at age 1, could turn over at age 1 and a half, and could sit unsupported at age 2. He could not speak, but could understand easy instructions. Upon physical examination, he showed nystagmus, hypertonia of the extremities, trunk hypotonia, and ankle joint contractures. His bilateral tendon reflexes were educed symmetrically. The Babinski sign was negative. Ophthalmic examination demonstrated esotropia and optic nerve atrophy. The serum CK level was 307–768 U/L. Leukodystrophy-related enzyme examination was normal. Blood and urine metabolism screens were normal. The karyotypic analysis was 46, XY. A brain MRI demonstrated frontal lobe micropolygyria, abnormal white-matter signals, and dysplasia of the brainstem and cerebellum (Fig. 2).
Patient 3
Patient 3 was a 1-year-6-month-old female born to a healthy mother by normal spontaneous vaginal delivery at full-term with a birth weight of 3.3 kg. She had one unaffected brother. Her parents were non-consanguineous Han from Beijing City (Pedigree shown in Supplementary Figure S1). The patient had feeding difficulties and decreased crying during infancy. She exhibited muscle weakness and hypotonia yet achieved head control at 4-months-old and the ability to sit at 1 and a half years of age. However, she could only sit unsupported for 2 minutes. She could not speak, but could understand easy instructions. Upon physical examination, she showed a prominent forehead, nystagmus, generalized muscle weakness, and marked hypotonia. Deep tendon reflexes were absent. Her Babinski sign was negative. An ophthalmic examination demonstrated retinal and choroidal pigment epithelium atrophy, as well as optic nerve atrophy (Fig. 1). Her serum CK level was 867 IU/l. Blood and urine metabolism screens were normal. A brain MRI showed frontal lobe micropolygyria, abnormal white-matter signals in the bilateral frontal region, dysplasia of the brainstem and cerebellum, and cerebellar cysts (Fig. 2).
Mutation analysis by NGS
NGS revealed POMGNT1 exons 18–19 deletion in all three patients, which was homozygous in patient 1 and heterozygous in patients 2 and 3. A summary of the number of patient and control reads of each exon, patient/control ratios of the number of sequence reads between patients, and their average control samples are listed (Table 1). The patient/control ratios of patient 1 were 0 in area of exons 18 and 19, which suggested homozygous deletion of exons 18 and 19. The patient/control ratios of patient 2 were 0.323317 in exon 18 and 0.415648 in exon 19. The patient/control ratios of patient 3 were 0.520472 in exon 18 and 0.49308 in exon 19. The ratios lower than 0.65 indicated patient 2 and patient 3 had heterozygous deletion of exons 18 and 19 (Fig. 3). Patient 2 had the compound heterozygous mutations of the CNV and a novel missense mutation c.296 T > C. Patient 3 had the compound heterozygous mutations of the CNV and a novel missense mutation c.794 G > C. Both missense mutations were located in the stem domain and predicted as pathogenic by using Polyphen-2, SIFT and Mutation Taster (Table 2).
Mutation analysis by long-range polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and Sanger sequencing
An electropherogram of PCR products revealed that the normal control had only the predicted size 2476-bp band. Patient 1 with the homozygous CNV had only one smaller size 886-bp band, while patient 1′s parents, patient 2, patient 2′s father, patient 3, and patient 3′s mother with heterozygous CNV had both the predicted size 2476-bp band and smaller size 886-bp band (Fig. 4). Length and breakpoints of the CNV were also confirmed by long-range PCR and Sanger sequencing. Three patients had the same 1590-bp CNV, g.6668–8257del of POMGNT1, including whole exons 18–19, as well as part of intron 17 and intron 19. The two breakpoints of the CNV display 42-bp of microhomology and localize to two AluY elements found in the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC) genome browser (http://genome.ucsc.edu/) (Fig. 5).
Prenatal diagnosis
All three DNA X chromosome markers (AR, DXS6797 and DXS6807) were informative in the family of Patient 2, with linkage analysis showing no maternal cell contamination in the amniocytes. We detected a carrier female fetus carrying only the paternal CNV(g.6668-8257del) without inheriting the maternal missense mutation (c.296 T > C). The girl was born uneventfully with no clinical MEB symptoms upon evaluation at 5 months old.
Discussion
MEB is also called congenital muscular dystrophy-dystroglycanopathy with brain and eye anomalies (type A3; MDDGA3), an autosomal recessive disorder with characteristic brain and eye malformations, profound mental retardation, and congenital muscular dystrophy11. MDDGA3 includes the more severe WWS, which represents the most severe end of a phenotypic spectrum of similar disorders known as α-DGPs5. MEB had phenotypic similarities with WWS, and the distinctness of the MEB disease had been discussed and pointed to as having consistent muscle involvement and longer periods of survival12, 13. WWS is defined as prenatal or neonatal absence of motor development, severe structural brain abnormalities, including complete agyria or severe lissencephaly, marked hydrocephalus, severe cerebellar involvement, and complete or partial absence of the corpus callosum, as well as common eye abnormalities including congenital cataracts, microphthalmia, and buphthalmos14, 15. Death usually occurred before 1 year of age in WWS patients5.
In our study, three MEB patients from three unrelated families, including two males and one female, had similar manifestations and different clinical severity. Their similar manifestations included hypotonia at birth, mental retardation, structural brain defects, and ocular malformations. Moreover, patient 1 manifested more severely than patients 2 and 3. Patient 1 could not sit unsupported, and could neither speak nor communicate with others until his last visit when he was 8years and 5-months old. Patients 2 and 3 could sit unsupported and understand easy instructions. Patient 1 also had more severe brain and eye damage than patients 2 and 3, with manifestations that patients 2 and 3 did not have, such as microphthalmia, microcornea, right cataract, left severe myopia, septum pellucidum absence, corpus callosum dysplasia, and cerebellar cysts. Patient 1 was more likely to be diagnosed with WWS according to his severe clinical manifestations, but he had a longer survival span than 1 year, so he was also diagnosed with MEB.
Based on our previous experience16 and their specific phenotype, it was not hard to make a clinical diagnosis. However, it was challenging to make a genetic diagnosis. During the first NGS, no pathogenic mutation was found in patient 1, including all of the 18 known pathogenetic genes of α-DGPs. However, one POMGNT1 mutation was found in patient 2 as well as patient 3, which indicated there was another undiscovered mutation. Considering that the sequencing quality was good enough, average sequencing reads were more than 100X, the targeted region was covered sufficiently, and no variant was omitted in the sequencing area, there were two possibilities. The first possibility was that the other undiscovered variant was a CNV. Otherwise, another variant possibly existed in the untranslated region (UTR) or in the introns. To detect variants in UTR and introns, another sequencing containing these areas needed to be done, so the existing NGS data were first used for detection of CNV. The number of each POMGNT1 exon sequence reads from the three patients and the control samples were analyzed for CNV. Further long-range PCR and Sanger sequencing were conducted to confirm the CNV detected by NGS data analysis. The different band size and numbers of PCR products on the electropherogram revealed the CNV as homozygous or heterozygous, which is the same as the NGS data analysis result. These findings indicate that NGS is a clinically useful method of detecting POMGNT1-related CNV.
POMGNT1 (ENST00000371992, NM_001243766) is divided into 23 exons and its coding region begins in exon 2. POMGNT1 encodes a 748-amino acid type II transmembrane protein (Uniprot ID: Q8WZA1-2) with the region from Met1 to Arg37 constituting a cytoplasmic tail, Phe38 to Ile58 constituting a putative transmembrane domain, and the remaining lumenal region including a stem domain and a catalytic domain1, 17,18,19. The product of POMGNT1, protein O-mannose beta-1,2-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase, participates in O-mannosyl glycan synthesis by transferring N-acetylglucosamine residues to O-linked mannose, which is essential for the proper functioning of α-DG17, 20. The CNV identified in POMGNT1 is a novel, out-of-frame deletion immediately leading to a stop codon. Mutation Taster simulations predicted theproduction of a truncated protein lacking part of the catalytic domain, which would suggest that the CNV is pathogenic. Besides the same CNV identified in POMGNT1, two missense mutations c.296 T > C and c.794 G > C were detected in patients 2 and 3 respectively. The missense mutations c.296 T > C and c.794 G > C were both novel, but another mutation in the same position, c.794 G > A, had been reported in two MEB siblings from a non-Finnish Caucasian family21. Both novel mutations were located in the stem domain and predicted as pathogenic by Polyphen-2, SIFT, and Mutation Taster. Given the phenotype of patient 1 is more severe than patients 2 and 3, the genotype-phenotype correlation was that the patient with homozygous CNV was severe than patients with heterozygous CNV.
Most human repeat sequence is derived from transposable elements, including long interspersed elements (LINEs), short interspersed elements (SINEs), long-terminal repeat (LTR) retrotransposons, and DNA transposons. The first three types transpose through RNA intermediates and the last type transposes directly as DNA. Alu elements are the only active SINEs in the human genome, and they have a high mutagenic potential in humans22. At the molecular level, Alu-Alu recombination can lead to genomic deletion flanked by identical Alu repeats and it has been reported in some hereditary diseases23. To our knowledge, only two patients from North Africa and one patient from Italy with MEB caused by CNV in POMGNT1 have been reported so far. The Italian patient had the deletion of exons 2–8 in POMGNT1, which was detected by quantitative PCR and multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA), with the breakpoints unconfirmed24. The two North African MEB patients had the deletion of exons 18–23 in POMGNT1, detected by quantitative PCR and array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH). The breakpoints confirmed by long-range PCR were different in the CNV of the two North African MEB patients. They had different haplotypes, which demonstrated the occurrence of two independent events and supported a common mechanism involving unequal homologous recombination between highly similar AluY elements located in intron 17 and the 3′UTR region of POMGNT1 25. In our study, the Sanger sequencing of PCR products revealed the same breakpoints of CNV with 42-bp of microhomology, and showed that the two breakpoints of the CNV localized to two AluY elements in intron 17 and intron 19. Although exact rearrangement join-point locations were different between the CNV in our study and the CNV in the North African MEB patients, the centromeric breakpoints of these three CNV localized to the same AluY in intron 17. The finding supported that AluY in intron 17 may be a “hotspot” for large genomic rearrangements in POMGNT1, and the novel CNV g.6668–8257del discovered by NGS is likely to be caused by Alu-specific microhomology-mediated deletion. Moreover, haplotype analysis revealed that all three patients carrying this CNV had the same haplotype (Table 3), revealing that it may be a founder mutation from a single ancestor bearing the deletion chromosome.
To conclude, this study revealed how NGS can identify the CNV of MEB and other inherited diseases, and three novel mutations in POMGNT1 were reported, which significantly expanded the mutation spectrum of MEB. The novel CNV g.6668–8257del discovered by NGS is likely to be caused by Alu-Alu recombination, or it results from a single ancestor bearing the deletion chromosome as a founder mutation. Furthermore, this study recognized that NGS plays an important role in genetic diagnosis, family genetics counseling, and prenatal diagnostic testing.
Materials and Methods
Patients
The research protocol was reviewed and approved by the Ethics Committee of the Peking University First Hospital (Beijing, China). All controls, patients, and/or their parents provided written informed consent to participate in the study and to grant permission to publish medical data. All methods were performed in accordance with the relevant guidelines and regulations. Clinical data were collected including motor development, mental development, pattern of muscle involvement, joint contracture, serum creatine kinase (CK) level, ocular malformation and brain involvement.
NGS
Genomic DNA of the patients and their parents was extracted from peripheral blood lymphocytes. A custom panel was designed to sequence the 167 genes known to be related to inherited muscular disease (Genes list shown in Supplementary Table 1). First, a DNA library was prepared and amplified from genomic DNA. Then, the coding exons and partial introns of 167 genes were selected by the SureSelect target enrichment system kit (Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA, USA). Sequencing was carried out on the Illumina NextSeq. 500 (Santiago, CA, USA). The results were transferred to a recognizable base sequence using bcl2fastq Conversion Software (Santiago, CA, USA). Clean reads were aligned on the human reference genome build hg19 using BWA26. Insertion-deletions (indels) and single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were called using GATK software27 and functionally annotated by ANNOVAR28. Homozygous variants and heterozygous variants appearing twice or more in 50 normal controls were excluded. Prediction of pathogenicity for novel missense variants was performed using Polyphen-2 (http://genetics.bwh.harvard.edu/pph2/)29, SIFT (http://sift.jcvi.org/)30 and Mutation Taster (http://www.mutationtaster.org)31. Phylogenetic conservation analysis of missense mutations was also performed from several organisms.
NGS data analysis for POMGNT1 CNV detection
The NGS data were analyzed for detection of CNV by comparing the number of sequence reads between patient and control samples. First, the number of each exon sequence reads from patient and control was counted. For the purposes of this comparison, we used sequencing data from 20 control samples, including both males and females, without POMGNT1 deletions (genomic sequencing was performed in these patients for diagnosis of other diseases). Data were obtained from samples using the same sequencing chip, sequenced on the same Illumina platform, and trimmed to the same read length as each patient sample. Next, the patient/control ratios were calculated by dividing the number of each exon sequence reads from patient by the average number of each exon sequence reads from the 20 control samples. Patient/control ratio lower than 0.65 indicates heterozygous deletions and ratios higher than 1.3 indicates duplications. Statistical analyses and graphs were obtained using GraphPad Prism7 (GraphPad Software, La Jolla, CA, USA).
Long-range PCR and Sanger sequencing
Long-range PCR and Sanger sequencing were performed to verify and sequence the breakpoints of the CNV. Primers used for amplification of the deletion junction were designed using Primer 5.0 (Premier Biosoft, Palo Alto, CA, USA), including Primer F (5′-AGCTTGAGCCCAAGTGGCCTACACC-3′) and Primer R (5′-TGGGTCCAGGTGGTGAAGTCATCATC-3′). PCR conditions were as follows: 200 ng of genomic DNA was amplified in a 50ul reaction volume with 2ul of each Primer (10pmol), and 25ul 2 × Long Taq PCR MasterMix (KT203, TIANGEN Biotech, Beijing, China). PCR amplifications were performed in an Applied Biosystems Veriti Thermal Cycler (4375305, ThermoFisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) for 35 cycles (30 s at 94 °C, 30 s at 60 °C and 180 s at 72 °C). PCR products were analyzed by electrophoresis on 2% agarose gel before sequencing. Then, PCR products were purified and directly sequenced using an automatic sequencer (ABI 3730xl DNA Analyzer; ThermoFisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA). Sequences were analyzed using DNASTAR software (Madison, WI, USA).
Haplotype analysis
Haplotype analysis was performed in patient 1 with homozygous CNV, as well as patients 2 and 3 with heterozygous CNV, to detect POMGNT1 SNPs. All were screened by NGS and Sanger sequencing for the following known polymorphisms: c.−11G > A; c.120 + 13 C > T; c.236 − 13 T > C; c.1111 − 23 C > T; c.1867A > G.
Prenatal diagnosis
Prenatal diagnosis was carried out in Patient 2′s mother during a subsequent pregnancy at a gestational age of 21 weeks. A 20 ml amniotic fluid sample was collected by amniocentesis under ultrasound guidance and divided into two parts; one part (12 ml) was used to extract DNA from the fetal free cells, and the rest (8 ml) was placed in culture. Before DNA sequencing, maternal cell contamination was excluded by PCR linkage analysis of polymorphic microsatellite markers. Three DNA markers linked to the X chromosome (AR, DXS6797 and DXS6807) were used for linkage analysis32. Fetal sex was determined by karyotype analysis and PCR amplification of the Homo sapiens sex-determining region Y (SRY, NM_003140). Amniotic fetal DNA was extracted using the Wizard Genomic DNA Purification Kit (Promega, USA) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The result of the fetal mutation analysis was confirmed by PCR amplification of the DNA extracted from the cultured amniocytes.
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Acknowledgements
We are grateful to the doctors, patients, and their families for their participation in this study and thank Dr. David B. Haslam, MD for his comments and criticisms on the manuscript. This work was supported by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (81571220) (81271400), Beijing Key Laboratory of Molecular Diagnosis and Study on Pediatric Genetic Diseases (No: Z141107004414036).
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H.X. and X.N.F. designed the experiment, and X.N.F. wrote the main manuscript. H.P.Y., H.J., S.W. and A.J.L. collected clinical data for this project. X.Q.L., J.X.X. and Y.L.Y. provided some good suggestions for clinical diagnosis. X.R.W. supervised the entire study. H.X. critically revised drafts of the manuscript, provided important intellectual input, and approved the final version for submission.
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Fu, X., Yang, H., Jiao, H. et al. Novel copy number variation of POMGNT1 associated with muscle-eye-brain disease detected by next-generation sequencing. Sci Rep 7, 7056 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-07349-8
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-07349-8
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