Cold Spring Harbor molecular case studies, volume 7, issue 6, pages a006125

Somatic mosaicism detected by genome-wide sequencing in 500 parent–child trios with suspected genetic disease: clinical and genetic counseling implications

Courtney B Cook 1
Linlea Armstrong 1
Cornelius F. Boerkoel 1
Lorne A. Clarke 1
Christèle Du Souich 1
Michelle Demos 2
William T Gibson 1
Elena Lopez 1
Millan S. Patel 1
Kathryn Selby 2
Ziad Abu Sharar 2
Alison M. Elliott 1
Jan M. Friedman 1
Show full list: 14 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2021-10-25
scimago Q2
SJR0.801
CiteScore3.2
Impact factor1.8
ISSN23732873, 23732865
General Medicine
Abstract

Identifying genetic mosaicism is important in establishing a diagnosis, assessing recurrence risk, and providing accurate genetic counseling. Next-generation sequencing has allowed for the identification of mosaicism at levels below those detectable by conventional Sanger sequencing or chromosomal microarray analysis. The CAUSES Clinic was a pediatric translational trio-based genome-wide (exome or genome) sequencing study of 500 families (531 children) with suspected genetic disease at BC Children's and Women's Hospitals. Here we present 12 cases of apparent mosaicism identified in the CAUSES cohort: nine cases of parental mosaicism for a disease-causing variant found in a child and three cases of mosaicism in the proband for a de novo variant. In six of these cases, there was no evidence of mosaicism on Sanger sequencing—the variant was not detected on Sanger sequencing in three cases, and it appeared to be heterozygous in three others. These cases are examples of six clinical manifestations of mosaicism: a proband with classical clinical features of mosaicism (e.g., segmental abnormalities of skin pigmentation or asymmetrical growth of bilateral body parts), a proband with unusually mild manifestations of a disease, a mosaic proband who is clinically indistinguishable from the constitutive phenotype, a mosaic parent with no clinical features of the disease, a mosaic parent with mild manifestations of the disease, and a family in which both parents are unaffected and two siblings have the same disease-causing constitutional mutation. Our data demonstrate the importance of considering the possibility of mosaicism whenever exome or genome sequencing is performed and that its detection via genome-wide sequencing can permit more accurate genetic counseling.

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