Exome sequencing identifies the cause of a mendelian disorder

SB Ng, KJ Buckingham, C Lee, AW Bigham, HK Tabor… - Nature …, 2010 - nature.com
SB Ng, KJ Buckingham, C Lee, AW Bigham, HK Tabor, KM Dent, CD Huff, PT Shannon
Nature genetics, 2010nature.com
We demonstrate the first successful application of exome sequencing to discover the gene
for a rare mendelian disorder of unknown cause, Miller syndrome (MIM% 263750). For four
affected individuals in three independent kindreds, we captured and sequenced coding
regions to a mean coverage of 40× and sufficient depth to call variants at∼ 97% of each
targeted exome. Filtering against public SNP databases and eight HapMap exomes for
genes with two previously unknown variants in each of the four individuals identified a single …
Abstract
We demonstrate the first successful application of exome sequencing to discover the gene for a rare mendelian disorder of unknown cause, Miller syndrome (MIM%263750). For four affected individuals in three independent kindreds, we captured and sequenced coding regions to a mean coverage of 40× and sufficient depth to call variants at ∼97% of each targeted exome. Filtering against public SNP databases and eight HapMap exomes for genes with two previously unknown variants in each of the four individuals identified a single candidate gene, DHODH, which encodes a key enzyme in the pyrimidine de novo biosynthesis pathway. Sanger sequencing confirmed the presence of DHODH mutations in three additional families with Miller syndrome. Exome sequencing of a small number of unrelated affected individuals is a powerful, efficient strategy for identifying the genes underlying rare mendelian disorders and will likely transform the genetic analysis of monogenic traits.
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