Frontiers in Genetics (Jun 2019)

Rare Genetic Variation in 135 Families With Family History Suggestive of X-Linked Intellectual Disability

  • Alba Sanchis-Juan,
  • Alba Sanchis-Juan,
  • Christina Bitsara,
  • Kay Yi Low,
  • Keren J. Carss,
  • Keren J. Carss,
  • Courtney E. French,
  • Courtney E. French,
  • Olivera Spasic-Boskovic,
  • Joanna Jarvis,
  • Michael Field,
  • F. Lucy Raymond,
  • F. Lucy Raymond,
  • Detelina Grozeva

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2019.00578
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Families with multiple male children with intellectual disability (ID) are usually suspected of having disease due to a X-linked mode of inheritance and genetic studies focus on analysis of segregating variants in X-linked genes. However, the genetic cause of ID remains elusive in approximately 50% of affected individuals. Here, we report the analysis of next-generation sequencing data in 274 affected individuals from 135 families with a family history suggestive of X-linked ID. Genetic diagnoses were obtained for 19% (25/135) of the families, and 24% (33/135) had a variant of uncertain significance. In 12% of cases (16/135), the variants were not shared within the family, suggesting genetic heterogeneity and phenocopies are frequent. Of all the families with reportable variants (43%, 58/135), we observed that 55% (32/58) were in X-linked genes, but 38% (22/58) were in autosomal genes, while the remaining 7% (4/58) had multiple variants in genes with different modes on inheritance. This study highlights that in families with multiple affected males, X linkage should not be assumed, and both individuals should be considered, as different genetic etiologies are common in apparent familial cases.

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