International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Nov 2022)

A Schematic Approach to Defining the Prevalence of COL VI Variants in Five Years of Next-Generation Sequencing

  • Gemma Marinella,
  • Guja Astrea,
  • Bianca Buchignani,
  • Denise Cassandrini,
  • Stefano Doccini,
  • Massimiliano Filosto,
  • Daniele Galatolo,
  • Salvatore Gallone,
  • Fabio Giannini,
  • Diego Lopergolo,
  • Maria Antonietta Maioli,
  • Francesca Magri,
  • Alessandro Malandrini,
  • Paola Mandich,
  • Francesco Mari,
  • Roberto Massa,
  • Sabrina Mata,
  • Federico Melani,
  • Maurizio Moggio,
  • Tiziana E. Mongini,
  • Rosa Pasquariello,
  • Elena Pegoraro,
  • Federica Ricci,
  • Giulia Ricci,
  • Carmelo Rodolico,
  • Anna Rubegni,
  • Gabriele Siciliano,
  • Martina Sperti,
  • Chiara Ticci,
  • Paola Tonin,
  • Filippo M. Santorelli,
  • Roberta Battini

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms232314567
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 23
p. 14567

Abstract

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Objective: To define the prevalence of variants in collagen VI genes through a next-generation sequencing (NGS) approach in undiagnosed patients with suspected neuromuscular disease and to propose a diagnostic flowchart to assess the real pathogenicity of those variants. Methods: In the past five years, we have collected clinical and molecular information on 512 patients with neuromuscular symptoms referred to our center. To pinpoint variants in COLVI genes and corroborate their real pathogenicity, we sketched a multistep flowchart, taking into consideration the bioinformatic weight of the gene variants, their correlation with clinical manifestations and possible effects on protein stability and expression. Results: In Step I, we identified variants in COLVI-related genes in 48 patients, of which three were homozygous variants (Group 1). Then, we sorted variants according to their CADD score, clinical data and complementary studies (such as muscle and skin biopsy, study of expression of COLVI on fibroblast or muscle and muscle magnetic resonance). We finally assessed how potentially pathogenic variants (two biallelic and 12 monoallelic) destabilize COL6A1-A2-A3 subunits. Overall, 15 out of 512 patients were prioritized according to this pipeline. In seven of them, we confirmed reduced or absent immunocytochemical expression of collagen VI in cultured skin fibroblasts or in muscle tissue. Conclusions: In a real-world diagnostic scenario applied to heterogeneous neuromuscular conditions, a multistep integration of clinical and molecular data allowed the identification of about 3% of those patients harboring pathogenetic collagen VI variants.

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