Publication:
The genomic and clinical landscape of fetal akinesia

dc.contributor.authorELÇİOĞLU, HURİYE NURSEL
dc.contributor.authorsPergande, Matthias; Motameny, Susanne; Oezdemir, Oezkan; Kreutzer, Mona; Wang, Haicui; Daimagueler, Huelya-Sevcan; Becker, Kerstin; Karakaya, Mert; Ehrhardt, Harald; Elcioglu, Nursel; Ostojic, Slavica; Chao, Cho-Ming; Kawalia, Amit; Duman, Ozgur; Koy, Anne; Hahn, Andreas; Reimann, Jens; Schoner, Katharina; Schaenzer, Anne; Westhoff, Jens H.; Schwaibold, Eva Maria Christina; Cossee, Mireille; Imbert-Bouteille, Marion; von Pein, Harald; Haliloglu, Goknur; Topaloglu, Haluk; Altmueller, Janine; Nuernberg, Peter; Thiele, Holger; Heller, Raoul; Cirak, Sebahattin
dc.date.accessioned2022-03-14T09:28:15Z
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-11T13:15:21Z
dc.date.available2022-03-14T09:28:15Z
dc.date.issued2020-03
dc.description.abstractPurpose Fetal akinesia has multiple clinical subtypes with over 160 gene associations, but the genetic etiology is not yet completely understood. Methods In this study, 51 patients from 47 unrelated families were analyzed using next-generation sequencing (NGS) techniques aiming to decipher the genomic landscape of fetal akinesia (FA). Results We have identified likely pathogenic gene variants in 37 cases and report 41 novel variants. Additionally, we report putative pathogenic variants in eight cases including nine novel variants. Our work identified 14 novel disease-gene associations for fetal akinesia: ADSSL1, ASAH1, ASPM, ATP2B3, EARS2, FBLN1, PRG4, PRICKLE1, ROR2, SETBP1, SCN5A, SCN8A, and ZEB2. Furthermore, a sibling pair harbored a homozygous copy-number variant in TNNT1, an ultrarare congenital myopathy gene that has been linked to arthrogryposis via Gene Ontology analysis. Conclusion Our analysis indicates that genetic defects leading to primary skeletal muscle diseases might have been underdiagnosed, especially pathogenic variants in RYR1. We discuss three novel putative fetal akinesia genes: GCN1, IQSEC3 and RYR3. Of those, IQSEC3, and RYR3 had been proposed as neuromuscular disease-associated genes recently, and our findings endorse them as FA candidate genes. By combining NGS with deep clinical phenotyping, we achieved a 73% success rate of solved cases.
dc.identifier.doi10.1038/s41436-019-0680-1
dc.identifier.eissn1530-0366
dc.identifier.issn1098-3600
dc.identifier.pubmed31680123
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11424/243163
dc.identifier.wosWOS:000518171700008
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherNATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
dc.relation.ispartofGENETICS IN MEDICINE
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.subjectfetal akinesia
dc.subjectarthrogryposis
dc.subjectmyopathy
dc.subjectexome
dc.subjectcopy-number variation
dc.subjectDISTAL ARTHROGRYPOSIS
dc.subjectNEMALINE MYOPATHY
dc.subjectMUTATIONS
dc.subjectGENETICS
dc.subjectVARIANTS
dc.titleThe genomic and clinical landscape of fetal akinesia
dc.typearticle
dspace.entity.typePublication
oaire.citation.endPage523
oaire.citation.issue3
oaire.citation.startPage511
oaire.citation.titleGENETICS IN MEDICINE
oaire.citation.volume22

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