1. Academic Validation
  2. Mutations causing medullary cystic kidney disease type 1 lie in a large VNTR in MUC1 missed by massively parallel sequencing

Mutations causing medullary cystic kidney disease type 1 lie in a large VNTR in MUC1 missed by massively parallel sequencing

  • Nat Genet. 2013 Mar;45(3):299-303. doi: 10.1038/ng.2543.
Andrew Kirby 1 Andreas Gnirke David B Jaffe Veronika Barešová Nathalie Pochet Brendan Blumenstiel Chun Ye Daniel Aird Christine Stevens James T Robinson Moran N Cabili Irit Gat-Viks Edward Kelliher Riza Daza Matthew DeFelice Helena Hůlková Jana Sovová Petr Vylet'al Corinne Antignac Mitchell Guttman Robert E Handsaker Danielle Perrin Scott Steelman Snaevar Sigurdsson Steven J Scheinman Carrie Sougnez Kristian Cibulskis Melissa Parkin Todd Green Elizabeth Rossin Michael C Zody Ramnik J Xavier Martin R Pollak Seth L Alper Kerstin Lindblad-Toh Stacey Gabriel P Suzanne Hart Aviv Regev Chad Nusbaum Stanislav Kmoch Anthony J Bleyer Eric S Lander Mark J Daly
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Abstract

Although genetic lesions responsible for some mendelian disorders can be rapidly discovered through massively parallel sequencing of whole genomes or exomes, not all diseases readily yield to such efforts. We describe the illustrative case of the simple mendelian disorder medullary cystic kidney disease type 1 (MCKD1), mapped more than a decade ago to a 2-Mb region on chromosome 1. Ultimately, only by cloning, capillary sequencing and de novo assembly did we find that each of six families with MCKD1 harbors an equivalent but apparently independently arising mutation in sequence markedly under-represented in massively parallel sequencing data: the insertion of a single cytosine in one copy (but a different copy in each family) of the repeat unit comprising the extremely long (∼1.5-5 kb), GC-rich (>80%) coding variable-number tandem repeat (VNTR) sequence in the MUC1 gene encoding Mucin 1. These results provide a cautionary tale about the challenges in identifying the genes responsible for mendelian, let alone more complex, disorders through massively parallel sequencing.

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