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Whole genome sequencing enhances molecular diagnosis of primary ciliary dyskinesia.

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posted on 2025-11-25, 16:55 authored by Holly A Black, Sophie Marion de Proce, Jose L Campos, Alison Meynert, Mihail Halachev, Joseph A Marsh, Robert HirstRobert Hirst, Chris O'Callaghan, Amelia Shoemark, Daniel Toddie-Moore, Scottish Genomes Partnership, Javier Santoyo-Lopez, Jennie Murray, Kenneth Macleod, Don S Urquhart, Stefan Unger, Timothy J Aitman, Pleasantine Mill
BACKGROUND: Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a genetic disorder affecting motile cilia. Most cases are inherited recessively, due to variants in >50 genes that result in abnormal or absent motile cilia. This leads to chronic upper and lower airway disease, subfertility, and laterality defects. Given overlapping clinical features and genetic heterogeneity, diagnosis can be difficult and often occurs late. Of those tested an estimated 30% of genetically screened PCD patients still lack a molecular diagnosis. A molecular diagnosis allows for appropriate clinical management including prediction of phenotypic features correlated to genotype. Here, we aimed to identify how readily a genetic diagnosis could be made using whole genome sequencing (WGS) to facilitate identification of pathogenic variants in known genes as well as novel PCD candidate genes. METHODS: WGS was used to screen for pathogenic variants in eight patients with PCD. RESULTS: 7/8 cases had homozygous or biallelic variants in DNAH5, DNAAF4 or DNAH11 classified as pathogenic or likely pathogenic. Three identified variants were deletions, ranging from 3 to 13 kb, for which WGS identified precise breakpoints, permitting confirmation by Sanger sequencing. WGS yielded identification of a de novo variant in a novel PCD gene TUBB4B. CONCLUSION: Here, WGS uplifted genetic diagnosis of PCD by identifying structural variants and novel modes of inheritance in new candidate genes. WGS could be an important component of the PCD diagnostic toolkit, increasing molecular diagnostic yield from current (70%) levels, and enhancing our understanding of fundamental biology of motile cilia and variants in the noncoding genome.<p></p>

Funding

Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish Government Health Directorates. Grant Number: [SGP_1]

The Scottish Genomes Partnership

Medical Research Council

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Genetic and cellular basis of functional cilia assembly

Medical Research Council

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Molecular principles of mammalian cilia diversity

Medical Research Council

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European Research Council (ERC). Grant Number: n°866355

Protein Complexes and Human Genetic Disease

Medical Research Council

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Lister Prize Fellowship

NHS Research Scotland fellowship

NRS/R+D fellowship from the NHS Lothian R&D office

History

Author affiliation

University of Leicester College of Life Sciences Medical Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Pediatric Pulmonology

Volume

59

Issue

12

Pagination

3322 - 3332

Publisher

Wiley

issn

8755-6863

eissn

1099-0496

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2025-11-25

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

eng

Deposited by

Dr Rob Hirst

Deposit date

2025-11-21

Data Access Statement

The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.