Interest of exome sequencing trio-like strategy based on pooled parental DNA for diagnosis and translational research in rare diseases

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TitreInterest of exome sequencing trio-like strategy based on pooled parental DNA for diagnosis and translational research in rare diseases
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuteursMau-Them FTran, Duffourd Y, Vitobello A, Bruel A-L, Denomme-Pichon A-S, Nambot S, Delanne J, Moutton S, Sorlin A, Couturier V, Bourgeois V, Chevarin M, Poe C, Mosca-Boidron A-L, Callier P, Safraou H, Faivre L, Philippe C, Thauvin-Robinet C, Grp OPhys
JournalMOLECULAR GENETICS & GENOMIC MEDICINE
Volume9
Paginatione1836
Date PublishedDEC
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN2324-9269
Mots-clésCost effectiveness, exome sequencing, parental-pool strategy, Rare diseases, trio-like strategy
Résumé

Background: Exome sequencing (ES) has become the most powerful and cost-effective molecular tool for deciphering rare diseases with a diagnostic yield approaching 30%-40% in solo-ES and 50% in trio-ES. We applied an innovative parental DNA pooling method to reduce the parental sequencing cost while maintaining the diagnostic yield of trio-ES. Methods: We pooled six (Agilent-CRE-v2-100X) or five parental DNA (TWIST-HCE-70X) aiming to detect allelic balance around 8-10% for heterozygous status. The strategies were applied as second-tier (74 individuals after negative solo-ES) and first-tier approaches (324 individuals without previous ES). Results: The allelic balance of parental-pool variants was around 8.97%. Sanger sequencing uncovered false positives in 1.5% of sporadic variants. In the second-tier approach, we evaluated than two thirds of the Sanger validations performed after solo-ES (41/59-69%) would have been saved if the parental-pool segregations had been available from the start. The parental-pool strategy identified a causative diagnosis in 18/74 individuals (24%) in the second-tier and in 116/324 individuals (36%) in the first-tier approaches, including 19 genes newly associated with human disorders. Conclusions: Parental-pooling is an efficient alternative to trio-ES. It provides rapid segregation and extension to translational research while reducing the cost of parental and Sanger sequencing.

DOI10.1002/mgg3.1836