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Peripheral blood epi-signature of Claes-Jensen syndrome enables sensitive and specific identification of patients and healthy carriers with pathogenic mutations in KDM5C
Clinical Epigenetics
  • Laila C Schenkel, Western University
  • Erfan Aref-Eshghi, Western University
  • Cindy Skinner
  • Peter Ainsworth, Western University
  • Hanxin Lin, Western University
  • Guillaume Paré
  • David I Rodenhiser, Western University
  • Charles Schwartz
  • Bekim Sadikovic, Western University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-14-2018
URL with Digital Object Identifier
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13148-018-0453-8
Disciplines
Abstract

Background

Claes-Jensen syndrome is an X-linked inherited intellectual disability caused by mutations in the

Results

Genome-wide DNA methylation analysis of 7 male patients affected with Claes-Jensen syndrome and 56 age- and sex-matched controls identified a specific DNA methylation defect (epi-signature) in the peripheral blood of these patients, including 1769 individual CpGs and 9 genomic regions. Six healthy female carriers showed less pronounced but distinctive changes in the same regions enabling their differentiation from both patients and controls. Highly specific computational model using the most significant methylation changes demonstrated 100% accuracy in differentiating patients, carriers, and controls in the training cohort, which was confirmed on a separate cohort of patients and carriers. The 100% specificity of this unique epi-signature was further confirmed on additional 500 unaffected controls and 600 patients with intellectual disability and developmental delay, including other patient cohorts with previously described epi-signatures.

Conclusion

Peripheral blood epi-signature in Claes-Jensen syndrome can be used for molecular diagnosis and carrier identification and assist with interpretation of genetic variants of unknown clinical significance in the

Notes

Article originally published at Clinical Epigenetics, Vol. 10.

https://doi.org/10.1186/s13148-018-0453-8

© The Author(s) 2018

Creative Commons License
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
Citation Information
Laila C Schenkel, Erfan Aref-Eshghi, Cindy Skinner, Peter Ainsworth, et al.. "Peripheral blood epi-signature of Claes-Jensen syndrome enables sensitive and specific identification of patients and healthy carriers with pathogenic mutations in KDM5C" Clinical Epigenetics Vol. 10 (2018) p. 21
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/bekim-sadikovic/8/