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17
result(s) for
"Buena-Atienza, Elena"
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Long-Read Sequencing Identifies Mosaic Sequence Variations in Friedreich’s Ataxia-GAA Repeats
2025
Friedreich’s ataxia (FRDA) is an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by ataxia, sensory loss and pyramidal signs. While the majority of FRDA cases are caused by biallelic GAA trinucleotide repeat expansions in intron 1 of FXN, there is a subset of patients harboring a heterozygous pathogenic small variant compound-heterozygous with a GAA repeat expansion. We report on the diagnostic journey of a 21-year-old patient who was clinically suspected of having FRDA at the age of 12 years. Genetic testing included fragment analysis, gene panel analysis and exome sequencing, which only detected one pathogenic heterozygous missense variant (c.389 G>T,p.Gly130Val) in FXN. Although conventional repeat analyses failed to detect GAA expansions in our patient, subsequent short-read genome sequencing (GS) indicated a potential GAA repeat expansion. This finding was confirmed by long-read GS, which in addition revealed a complex pattern of interruptions. Both large and small GAA expansions with divergent interruptions containing G, A, GA, GAG and/or GAAG sequences were present within one allele, indicating mosaic sequence variations. Our findings underscore the complexity of repeat expansions which can exhibit both interruptions and somatic instability. We also highlight the utility of long-read GS in unraveling intricate genetic profiles, ultimately contributing to more accurate diagnoses in clinical practice.
Journal Article
Exome Sequencing and Optical Genome Mapping in Molecularly Unsolved Cases of Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy: Identification of a Causative X-Chromosomal Inversion Disrupting the DMD Gene
by
Lücke, Thomas
,
Güttsches, Anne-Katrin
,
Roos, Andreas
in
Biopsy
,
Family medical history
,
Genes
2023
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a severe progressive muscle disease that mainly affects boys due to X-linked recessive inheritance. In most affected individuals, MLPA or sequencing-based techniques detect deletions, duplications, or point mutations in the dystrophin-encoding DMD gene. However, in a small subset of patients clinically diagnosed with DMD, the molecular cause is not identified with these routine methods. Evaluation of the 60 DMD patients in our center revealed three cases without a known genetic cause. DNA samples of these patients were analyzed using whole-exome sequencing (WES) and, if unconclusive, optical genome mapping (OGM). WES led to a diagnosis in two cases: one patient was found to carry a splice mutation in the DMD gene that had not been identified during previous Sanger sequencing. In the second patient, we detected two variants in the fukutin gene (FKTN) that were presumed to be disease-causing. In the third patient, WES was unremarkable, but OGM identified an inversion disrupting the DMD gene (~1.28 Mb) that was subsequently confirmed with long-read sequencing. These results highlight the importance of reanalyzing unsolved cases using WES and demonstrate that OGM is a useful method for identifying large structural variants in cases with unremarkable exome sequencing.
Journal Article
A 73,128 bp de novo deletion encompassing the OPN1LW/OPN1MW gene cluster in sporadic Blue Cone Monochromacy: a case report
by
Kohl, Susanne
,
Buena-Atienza, Elena
,
Wissinger, Bernd
in
Adult
,
Alu-mediated recombination
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2018
Background
Blue Cone Monochromacy (BCM) is a rare congenital cone dysfunction disorder with X-linked recessive mode of inheritance. BCM is caused by mutations at the
OPN1LW/MW
cone opsin gene cluster including deletions of the locus control region (LCR) and/or parts of the gene cluster. We aimed at investigating the clinical presentation, genetic cause and inheritance underlying a sporadic case of BCM.
Case presentation
We report a 24-year-old male presenting with congenital photophobia, nystagmus and colour vision abnormalities. There was no history of retinal dystrophy in the family. Clinical diagnosis of BCM was supported by genetic investigations of the patient and his family members. Molecular genetic analysis of the
OPN1LW/OPN1MW
gene cluster revealed a novel deletion of about 73 kb in the patient encompassing the LCR. The deletion was absent in the X-chromosomes of both the mother and transmitting grandfather.
Conclusions
The present report provides the clinical findings and the genetic basis underlying a sporadic BCM case which is caused by a
de novo
deletion within the
OPN1LW/MW
gene cluster originating from the mother’s germline due to Alu-repeat mediated recombination. This is the first report of a
de novo
deletion resulting in BCM, highlighting the importance to consider BCM and perform genetic testing for this condition in male patients with cone dysfunction also in the absence of a positive family history.
Journal Article
Long-read RNA-sequencing reveals transcript-specific regulation in human-derived cortical neurons
by
Xu, Jishu
,
Hauser, Stefan
,
Admard, Jakob
in
Alternative Splicing
,
Cerebral Cortex - cytology
,
Cerebral Cortex - metabolism
2025
Long-read RNA sequencing has transformed transcriptome analysis by enabling comprehensive mapping of full-length transcripts, providing an unprecedented resolution of transcript diversity, alternative splicing and transcript-specific regulation. In this study, we employed nanopore long-read RNA sequencing to profile the transcriptomes of three cell types commonly used to model brain disorders, human fibroblasts, induced pluripotent stem cells and stem cell-derived cortical neurons, identifying extensive transcript diversity with 15 072 transcripts in stem cell-derived cortical neurons, 13 048 in fibroblasts and 12 759 in induced pluripotent stem cells. Our analyses uncovered 35 519 differential transcript expression events and 5135 differential transcript usage events, underscoring the complexity of transcriptomic regulation across these cell types. Importantly, by integrating differential transcript expression and usage analyses, we gained deeper insights into transcript dynamics that are not captured by gene-level expression analysis alone. Differential transcript usage analysis highlighted transcript-specific changes in disease-relevant genes such as APP , KIF2A and BSCL2 , associated with Alzheimer’s disease, neuronal migration disorders and degenerative axonopathies, respectively. This added resolution emphasizes the significance of transcript-level variations that often remain hidden in traditional differential gene expression analyses. Overall, our work provides a framework for understanding transcript diversity in both pluripotent and specialized cell types, which can be used to investigate transcriptomic changes in disease states in future work. Additionally, this study underscores the utility of differential transcript usage analysis in advancing our understanding of neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative diseases, paving the way for identifying transcript-specific therapeutic targets.
Journal Article
Accurate long-read sequencing identified GBA1 as major risk factor in the Luxembourgish Parkinson’s study
by
Gross, Caspar
,
Pavelka, Lukas
,
Buena-Atienza, Elena
in
692/699/375/1718
,
692/699/375/365/1718
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2023
Heterozygous variants in the glucocerebrosidase
GBA1
gene are an increasingly recognized risk factor for Parkinson’s disease (PD). Due to the
GBAP1
pseudogene, which shares 96% sequence homology with the
GBA1
coding region, accurate variant calling by array-based or short-read sequencing methods remains a major challenge in understanding the genetic landscape of
GBA1
-associated PD. We analyzed 660 patients with PD, 100 patients with Parkinsonism and 808 healthy controls from the Luxembourg Parkinson’s study, sequenced using amplicon-based long-read DNA sequencing technology. We found that 12.1% (77/637) of PD patients carried
GBA1
variants, with 10.5% (67/637) of them carrying known pathogenic variants (including severe, mild, risk variants). In comparison, 5% (34/675) of the healthy controls carried
GBA1
variants, and among them, 4.3% (29/675) were identified as pathogenic variant carriers. We found four
GBA1
variants in patients with atypical parkinsonism. Pathogenic
GBA1
variants were 2.6-fold more frequently observed in PD patients compared to controls (OR = 2.6; CI = [1.6,4.1]). Three novel variants of unknown significance (VUS) were identified. Using a structure-based approach, we defined a potential risk prediction method for VUS. This study describes the full landscape of
GBA1
-related parkinsonism in Luxembourg, showing a high prevalence of
GBA1
variants as the major genetic risk for PD. Although the long-read DNA sequencing technique used in our study may be limited in its effectiveness to detect potential structural variants, our approach provides an important advancement for highly accurate
GBA1
variant calling, which is essential for providing access to emerging causative therapies for
GBA1
carriers.
Journal Article
De novo intrachromosomal gene conversion from OPN1MW to OPN1LW in the male germline results in Blue Cone Monochromacy
by
Weisschuh, Nicole
,
De Baere, Elfride
,
Plomp, Astrid S.
in
631/208/1792
,
631/208/728
,
692/699/3161/3165
2016
X-linked cone dysfunction disorders such as Blue Cone Monochromacy and X-linked Cone Dystrophy are characterized by complete loss (of) or reduced L- and M- cone function due to defects in the
OPN1LW/OPN1MW
gene cluster. Here we investigated 24 affected males from 16 families with either a structurally intact gene cluster or at least one intact single (hybrid) gene but harbouring rare combinations of common SNPs in exon 3 in single or multiple
OPN1LW
and
OPN1MW
gene copies. We assessed twelve different
OPN1LW/MW
exon 3 haplotypes by semi-quantitative minigene splicing assay. Nine haplotypes resulted in aberrant splicing of ≥20% of transcripts including the known pathogenic haplotypes (i.e. ‘LIAVA’, ‘LVAVA’) with absent or minute amounts of correctly spliced transcripts, respectively.
De novo
formation of the ‘LIAVA’ haplotype derived from an ancestral less deleterious ‘LIAVS’ haplotype was observed in one family with strikingly different phenotypes among affected family members. We could establish intrachromosomal gene conversion in the male germline as underlying mechanism. Gene conversion in the
OPN1LW/OPN1MW
genes has been postulated, however, we are first to demonstrate a
de novo
gene conversion within the lineage of a pedigree.
Journal Article
Efficient hybrid de novo assembly of human genomes with WENGAN
by
Sagot, Marie-France
,
Buena-Atienza, Elena
,
Di Genova, Alex
in
631/114
,
631/114/794
,
631/208/212
2021
Generating accurate genome assemblies of large, repeat-rich human genomes has proved difficult using only long, error-prone reads, and most human genomes assembled from long reads add accurate short reads to polish the consensus sequence. Here we report an algorithm for hybrid assembly, WENGAN, that provides very high quality at low computational cost. We demonstrate de novo assembly of four human genomes using a combination of sequencing data generated on ONT PromethION, PacBio Sequel, Illumina and MGI technology. WENGAN implements efficient algorithms to improve assembly contiguity as well as consensus quality. The resulting genome assemblies have high contiguity (contig NG50: 17.24–80.64 Mb), few assembly errors (contig NGA50: 11.8–59.59 Mb), good consensus quality (QV: 27.84–42.88) and high gene completeness (BUSCO complete: 94.6–95.2%), while consuming low computational resources (CPU hours: 187–1,200). In particular, the
W
ENGAN assembly of the haploid CHM13 sample achieved a contig NG50 of 80.64 Mb (NGA50: 59.59 Mb), which surpasses the contiguity of the current human reference genome (GRCh38 contig NG50: 57.88 Mb).
The genome assembler WENGAN produces high-quality human genome sequences at low computational cost.
Journal Article
A GGC-repeat expansion in ZFHX3 encoding polyglycine causes spinocerebellar ataxia type 4 and impairs autophagy
by
Feindt, Thomas
,
Ossowski, Stephan
,
Scoles, Daniel R.
in
631/208/2489/1512
,
692/699/375/365/1917
,
Agriculture
2024
Despite linkage to chromosome 16q in 1996, the mutation causing spinocerebellar ataxia type 4 (SCA4), a late-onset sensory and cerebellar ataxia, remained unknown. Here, using long-read single-strand whole-genome sequencing (LR-GS), we identified a heterozygous GGC-repeat expansion in a large Utah pedigree encoding polyglycine (polyG) in zinc finger homeobox protein 3 (ZFHX3), also known as AT-binding transcription factor 1 (ATBF1). We queried 6,495 genome sequencing datasets and identified the repeat expansion in seven additional pedigrees. Ultrarare DNA variants near the repeat expansion indicate a common distant founder event in Sweden. Intranuclear ZFHX3–p62–ubiquitin aggregates were abundant in SCA4 basis pontis neurons. In fibroblasts and induced pluripotent stem cells, the GGC expansion led to increased ZFHX3 protein levels and abnormal autophagy, which were normalized with small interfering RNA-mediated
ZFHX3
knockdown in both cell types. Improving autophagy points to a therapeutic avenue for this novel polyG disease. The coding GGC-repeat expansion in an extremely G+C-rich region was not detectable by short-read whole-exome sequencing, which demonstrates the power of LR-GS for variant discovery.
Long-read sequencing identifies a GGC-repeat expansion in the coding region of
ZFHX3
as the cause of spinocerebellar ataxia type 4. The expansion encodes polyglycine and results in intranuclear aggregates and abnormal autophagy.
Journal Article