Caitlin Forwood, Katie Ashton, Ying Zhu, Futao Zhang, Kerith-Rae Dias, Krystle Standen, Carey-Anne Evans, Louise Carey, Michael Cardamone, Carolyn Shalhoub, Hala Katf, Carlos Riveros, Tzung-Chien Hsieh, Peter Krawitz, Peter N Robinson, Tracy Dudding-Byth, Bekim Sadikovic, Jason Pinner, Michael F. Buckley, Tony Roscioli
{"title":"ARID1B错义变体重新分类中EpiSign、面部表型和临床异常似然比解释的整合。","authors":"Caitlin Forwood, Katie Ashton, Ying Zhu, Futao Zhang, Kerith-Rae Dias, Krystle Standen, Carey-Anne Evans, Louise Carey, Michael Cardamone, Carolyn Shalhoub, Hala Katf, Carlos Riveros, Tzung-Chien Hsieh, Peter Krawitz, Peter N Robinson, Tracy Dudding-Byth, Bekim Sadikovic, Jason Pinner, Michael F. Buckley, Tony Roscioli","doi":"10.1002/ajmg.c.32056","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Heterozygous <i>ARID1B</i> variants result in Coffin–Siris syndrome. Features may include hypoplastic nails, slow growth, characteristic facial features, hypotonia, hypertrichosis, and sparse scalp hair. Most reported cases are due to <i>ARID1B</i> loss of function variants. We report a boy with developmental delay, feeding difficulties, aspiration, recurrent respiratory infections, slow growth, and hypotonia without a clinical diagnosis, where a previously unreported <i>ARID1B</i> missense variant was classified as a variant of uncertain significance. The pathogenicity of this variant was refined through combined methodologies including genome-wide methylation signature analysis (EpiSign), Machine Learning (ML) facial phenotyping, and LIRICAL. Trio exome sequencing and EpiSign were performed. ML facial phenotyping compared facial images using FaceMatch and GestaltMatcher to syndrome-specific libraries to prioritize the trio exome bioinformatic pipeline gene list output. Phenotype-driven variant prioritization was performed with LIRICAL. A de novo heterozygous missense variant, <i>ARID1B</i> p.(Tyr1268His), was reported as a variant of uncertain significance. The ACMG classification was refined to likely pathogenic by a supportive methylation signature, ML facial phenotyping, and prioritization through LIRICAL. The <i>ARID1B</i> genotype–phenotype has been expanded through an extended analysis of missense variation through genome-wide methylation signatures, ML facial phenotyping, and likelihood-ratio gene prioritization.</p>","PeriodicalId":7445,"journal":{"name":"American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C: Seminars in Medical Genetics","volume":"193 3","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.8000,"publicationDate":"2023-08-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/ajmg.c.32056","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Integration of EpiSign, facial phenotyping, and likelihood ratio interpretation of clinical abnormalities in the re-classification of an ARID1B missense variant\",\"authors\":\"Caitlin Forwood, Katie Ashton, Ying Zhu, Futao Zhang, Kerith-Rae Dias, Krystle Standen, Carey-Anne Evans, Louise Carey, Michael Cardamone, Carolyn Shalhoub, Hala Katf, Carlos Riveros, Tzung-Chien Hsieh, Peter Krawitz, Peter N Robinson, Tracy Dudding-Byth, Bekim Sadikovic, Jason Pinner, Michael F. 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ML facial phenotyping compared facial images using FaceMatch and GestaltMatcher to syndrome-specific libraries to prioritize the trio exome bioinformatic pipeline gene list output. Phenotype-driven variant prioritization was performed with LIRICAL. A de novo heterozygous missense variant, <i>ARID1B</i> p.(Tyr1268His), was reported as a variant of uncertain significance. The ACMG classification was refined to likely pathogenic by a supportive methylation signature, ML facial phenotyping, and prioritization through LIRICAL. 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Integration of EpiSign, facial phenotyping, and likelihood ratio interpretation of clinical abnormalities in the re-classification of an ARID1B missense variant
Heterozygous ARID1B variants result in Coffin–Siris syndrome. Features may include hypoplastic nails, slow growth, characteristic facial features, hypotonia, hypertrichosis, and sparse scalp hair. Most reported cases are due to ARID1B loss of function variants. We report a boy with developmental delay, feeding difficulties, aspiration, recurrent respiratory infections, slow growth, and hypotonia without a clinical diagnosis, where a previously unreported ARID1B missense variant was classified as a variant of uncertain significance. The pathogenicity of this variant was refined through combined methodologies including genome-wide methylation signature analysis (EpiSign), Machine Learning (ML) facial phenotyping, and LIRICAL. Trio exome sequencing and EpiSign were performed. ML facial phenotyping compared facial images using FaceMatch and GestaltMatcher to syndrome-specific libraries to prioritize the trio exome bioinformatic pipeline gene list output. Phenotype-driven variant prioritization was performed with LIRICAL. A de novo heterozygous missense variant, ARID1B p.(Tyr1268His), was reported as a variant of uncertain significance. The ACMG classification was refined to likely pathogenic by a supportive methylation signature, ML facial phenotyping, and prioritization through LIRICAL. The ARID1B genotype–phenotype has been expanded through an extended analysis of missense variation through genome-wide methylation signatures, ML facial phenotyping, and likelihood-ratio gene prioritization.
期刊介绍:
Seminars in Medical Genetics, Part C of the American Journal of Medical Genetics (AJMG) , serves as both an educational resource and review forum, providing critical, in-depth retrospectives for students, practitioners, and associated professionals working in fields of human and medical genetics. Each issue is guest edited by a researcher in a featured area of genetics, offering a collection of thematic reviews from specialists around the world. Seminars in Medical Genetics publishes four times per year.