Clinical Application of Whole Exome and Genome
Transcription
Clinical Application of Whole Exome and Genome
Clinical Application of Whole Exome and Genome Sequencing Elizabeth Chao, MD, FACMG Department of Pediatrics, Division of Genetics & Metabolism UC Irvine 1 Disclosures A. “I have the following financial relationships with the manufactures(s) of any commercial product(s) and/or provider(s) of commercial services discussed in this CME activity:” • Consultant for: Ambry Genetics B. I do not intend to discuss an unapproved/investigative use of commercial product/device in my presentation. Diagnostic Exome Sequencing Flow 1 Family’s samples arrive 2 Prepare exome libraries and sequence 4 5 Medical review 6 10 Medical review: Secondary findings 3 Informatics filtering Cosegregation analysis Primer design 9 7 Secondary findings report 8 Medical review Reporting Why Order Whole Exome/Genome Sequencing? Indications 1. Diagnosis Rare and heritable disease 2. Treatment Cancer Somatic Alteration 3. Prevention Exome Sequencing To Identify Mutations in Rare, Heritable Disease • A genetic disorder is suspected based on clinical findings, but limited and/or no comprehensive panels are available. • The patient's clinical presentation is unclear/atypical disease and there are multiple genetic conditions in the differential diagnosis. • A novel gene is suspected, but has yet to be discovered. 14-year old female • Hypotonia • Developmental Delay – Single word vocalization • Seizures • Cognitive Impairment • Severe Ataxia – Unable to ambulate • Similarly affected 5yr old sister • Years of inconclusive biochemical, molecular, cytogenetics, invasive testing Exome Result Likely Molecular Diagnosis: Mitochondrial Complex I Deficiency • 103 patients • Isolated complex I deficiency by biochemical analysis • NGS of 103 candidate genes (complex I components) plus 2x7kb of mtDNA Calvo et al Nature Genetics, 2010 NUBPL variants • Homozygous c.166G>A (p.G56R) • Heterozygous intronic variant c.815-27T>C Padgett et sl.(Sep 2005) Splice Sites. In: eLS. John Wiley & Sons Ltd, Chichester. http://www.els.net • Well conserved • Have we identified the causative mutations? – Homozygous missense – Compound Heterozygous Calvo et al., Nat Genetics 2010 Interpret with care: Parental Testing Apparently ^ • Homozygous c.166G>A (p.G56R) • Inherited from father • Needs deletion/duplication analysis – Affymetrix cytoarray Copy number analysis • Heterozygous c.166G>A (p.G56R) • Array-based copy-number Padgett et sl.(Sep 2005) Splice Sites. In: eLS. John Wiley & Sons Ltd, Chichester. http://www.els.net Calvo et al., Nat Genetics 2010 p.G56R has no functional defect • In-vitro assay import assay of 35S-labeled protein • Efficient import of WT and mutant protein • No difference in size suggesting intact protein processing • Transduction of lentiviral vector with mutant and WT NUBPL into patient fibroblasts – Both expressed and stable – Restored complex I deficiency to WT levels Calvo et al., Nat Genetics 2010 Tucker et al. Hum Mut 2012 c.815-27T>C causes aberrant splicing • Abnormal splicing – 2 abnormal transcripts • Heterozygous intronic variant c.815-27T>C • Exon 10 skipping • Partial intron 9 inclusion Padgett et sl.(Sep 2005) Splice Sites. In: eLS. John Wiley & Sons Ltd, Chichester. http://www.els.net • Branch Site (-18 to 40bp) Padgett et al Trends in Genetics 2012 Calvo et al., Nat Genetics 2010 Tucker et al. Hum Mut 2012 Summary of Results • Mutation 1 (Maternal): Rearrangement (Ex1_4del; Ex7dup) • Mutation 2 (Paternal): c.815-27T>C – Branch site mutation – Exon 10 skipping – Missense variant in cis and likely benign Calvo et al., Nat Genetics 2010 Three cases of NUBPL-linked complex I deficiency Presenting Calvo et al. 2010 Gender Genetic Current Age Age of onset Symptom Alterations Ataxia Male p.G56R Ins/Del Developmental 8 yrs 2 yrs Delay Yes c.815-27T>C Rearrangement Tenisch et al. 2012 p.G56R Male c.815-27T>C 23 yrs 2-3 yrsc.205_205delGT Yes Current Patient c.815-27T>C 14 yrs 6 mo p.L104P Delay Speech Ocular Sx Seizures Yes CNS Lactate Muscle Bx Leukodystrophy Slurred Nystagmus T2 hyperinstensity of cerebellum and brainstem Elevated Impaired Nystagmus Yes Cerebellar and pons atrophy Normal Elevated Mutations Variant, Likely Pathogenic Variant, Likely Benign Plasma Lactate Nystagmus staring Impaired Squint spells Developmental Female MRI Normal Elevated ~20% Ragged Red Fibers Complex I Deficiency Skeletal Muscle and Fibroblasts Skeletal Muscle Pending Pending Impact on Family • Molecular Diagnosis • AR Inheritance pattern – Known recurrence risk • Previously reported patients – Stable, not progressive • Awaiting confirmatory enzyme testing • Treatment Options – Mitochondrial Cocktail – Novel therapies • EPI-743 (Leigh Syndrome) Time to Diagnostic Exome Sequencing= 13 years Time to Molecular Diagnosis= 6 weeks Rare Gene Findings Collaborative Effort Connecting Clinicans in the Genomic Age http://www.ambrygen.com/cde-genes • Not every exome result is published today • Whole exome sequencing is done at many labs – Both research and clinical • Are there any other patients out there like me? • Are there any other patients out there like mine? Rare Gene Findings Collaborative Effort http://www.ambrygen.com/cde-genes Negative Exome Testing • Review the differential diagnosis • Review the candidate genes with the testing laboratory – What was the coverage? – Was the gene/locus considered? • Disease may still be heritable • Consider other options for clinical diagnosis – Biochemical testing – Biopsy, tissue, diagnosis, etc. • Additional Molecular Testing options? Human Genome: 6 billion basepairs (diploid) What about Whole Sequenced Exome: ~95% Genome? ? ? Helps but does not Cure More Targeted coverage Exome: ~97% More cost ? More Exome: ~20K genes variants Still limitations Low Complexity Regions Triplet repeats My gene/mutation of interest - Was it targeted? - Was it covered? Why Order Whole Exome/Genome Sequencing? Indications 1. Diagnosis Rare and heritable disease 2. Treatment Cancer Somatic Alteration Cancer Progression and Treatment “….molecular alterations in several cancers supported targeted therapeutic intervention on clinical trials with known inhibitors, particularly for alterations in the RAS/RAF/MEK/ERK and PI3K/AKT/mTor pathways.” 9 of 14 triple negative breast tumors Recurrent Pediatric Cancer Hyundai Cancer Institute- CHOC • Pilot Program – Enrolling recurrent refractory pediatric cancers – Trio Analysis • Primary, recurrent and germline • Whole Genome Sequencing • RNA-seq transcriptome profiling – Molecular Tumor Board • Therapeutic Intervention • Challenges – Rarity of pediatric tumors • 14 cases enrolled to date • N=1 based analysis – Availability of primary tissue • New protocols to bank primary tissue in case of recurrence – Turn- around time • Molecular analysis – Therapeutic Availibility Why Order Whole Exome/Genome Sequencing? Indications 1. Diagnosis Rare and heritable disease 2. Treatment Cancer Somatic Alteration 3. Prevention Healthy Exomes: Are we there yet? Prevention Healthy Exomes: Are we there yet? Newborn Screening Incidental Exome Findings Do we have time to care? Reportable incidental findings mutations include only: – HGMD or OMIM-defined – Well-established disease causing genes – No variants of uncertain significance – Predefined gene lists • • • • ACMG minimum Cancer predisposition (~90 genes) Carrier Status (~150 genes) Adult and Childhood onset disease (~400genes) Time to Analysis: – – – – Average of 30 variants reviewed per patient Average of 1 disease-causing mutation identified Carrier Status Range: 0-5 HFE, UROD, SCNN1G, CDH1, DGUOK, TTN, MYH7, etc. Yes, we do and we should Thank you UC Irvine/CHOC Ambry Genetics Virginia Kimonis Moyra Smith Wenqi Zeng Sha Tang Jennifer Wei Julie Neidich Aaron Elliott Sharon Mexal Shela Lee Layla Shahmirizadi Melissa Parra Kelly Gonzalez Chad Garner Lennie Sender Pierre Baldi Dan Mercola Michael McClelland RARE Global Genes Project Nicole Boice 28