Scientific Reports (May 2022)

Parental segregation study reveals rare benign and likely benign variants in a Brazilian cohort of rare diseases

  • Caio Robledo D.’Angioli Costa Quaio,
  • Jose Ricardo Magliocco Ceroni,
  • Murilo Castro Cervato,
  • Helena Strelow Thurow,
  • Caroline Monaco Moreira,
  • Ana Carolina Gomes Trindade,
  • Cintia Reys Furuzawa,
  • Rafaela Rogerio Floriano de Souza,
  • Sandro Felix Perazzio,
  • Aurelio Pimenta Dutra,
  • Christine Hsiaoyun Chung,
  • Chong Ae Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-11932-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Genomic studies may generate massive amounts of data, bringing interpretation challenges. Efforts for the differentiation of benign and pathogenic variants gain importance. In this article, we used segregation analysis and other molecular data to reclassify to benign or likely benign several rare clinically curated variants of autosomal dominant inheritance from a cohort of 500 Brazilian patients with rare diseases. This study included only symptomatic patients who had undergone molecular investigation with exome sequencing for suspected diseases of genetic etiology. Variants clinically suspected as the causative etiology and harbored by genes associated with highly-penetrant conditions of autosomal dominant inheritance underwent Sanger confirmation in the proband and inheritance pattern determination because a “de novo” event was expected. Among all 327 variants studied, 321 variants were inherited from asymptomatic parents. Considering segregation analysis, we have reclassified 51 rare variants as benign and 211 as likely benign. In our study, the inheritance of a highly penetrant variant expected to be de novo for pathogenicity assumption was considered as a non-segregation and, therefore, a key step for benign or likely benign classification. Studies like ours may help to identify rare benign variants and improve the correct interpretation of genetic findings.