Genome-scale sequencing creates vast amounts of genomic data, increasing the challenge of clinical sequence variant interpretation. The demand for high-quality interpretation requires multiple specialties to join forces to accelerate the interpretation of sequence variant pathogenicity. With over 600 international members including clinicians, researchers, and laboratory diagnosticians, the Clinical Genome Resource (ClinGen), funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), is forming expert groups to systematically evaluate variants in clinically relevant genes. Here, we describe the first ClinGen Variant Curation Expert Panels (VCEPs), development of consistent and streamlined processes for establishing new VCEPs, and creation of standard operating procedures (SOPs) for VCEPs to define application of the ACMG/AMP guidelines for sequence variant interpretation in specific genes or diseases. Additionally, ClinGen has created user interfaces to enhance reliability of curation and a Sequence Variant Interpretation Working Group (SVI WG) to harmonize guideline specifications and ensure consistency between groups. The expansion of VCEPs represents the primary mechanism by which curation of a substantial fraction of genomic variants can be accelerated and ultimately undertaken systematically and comprehensively. We welcome groups to utilize our resources and become involved in our effort to create a publicly accessible, centralized resource for clinically relevant genes and variants.
Despite rapid technical progress and demonstrable effectiveness for some types of diagnosis and therapy, much remains to be learned about clinical genome and exome sequencing (CGES) and its role within the practice of medicine. The Clinical Sequencing Exploratory Research (CSER) consortium includes 18 extramural research projects, one National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) intramural project, and a coordinating center funded by the NHGRI and National Cancer Institute. The consortium is exploring analytic and clinical validity and utility, as well as the ethical, legal, and social implications of sequencing via multidisciplinary approaches; it has thus far recruited 5,577 participants across a spectrum of symptomatic and healthy children and adults by utilizing both germline and cancer sequencing. The CSER consortium is analyzing data and creating publically available procedures and tools related to participant preferences and consent, variant classification, disclosure and management of primary and secondary findings, health outcomes, and integration with electronic health records. Future research directions will refine measures of clinical utility of CGES in both germline and somatic testing, evaluate the use of CGES for screening in healthy individuals, explore the penetrance of pathogenic variants through extensive phenotyping, reduce discordances in public databases of genes and variants, examine social and ethnic disparities in the provision of genomics services, explore regulatory issues, and estimate the value and downstream costs of sequencing. The CSER consortium has established a shared community of research sites by using diverse approaches to pursue the evidence-based development of best practices in genomic medicine.
In the originally published version of this article, Table 1 unfortunately included c.542G>A instead of c.542G>T. This mutation was correctly notated as c.
Additional variant interpretation tools are required to effectively harness genomic sequencing for clinical applications. The American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) and Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP) published guidelines for clinical sequence variant interpretation, incorporating different types of data that lend varying levels of support towards a benign or pathogenic interpretation. Variants of uncertain significance (VUS) are those with either contradictory or insufficient evidence, and their uncertainty complicates patient counseling and management. Functional assays may provide a solution to evidence gaps relegating variants to the VUS category, but the impact of functional evidence in this framework has not been assessed. We employ an algorithmic analysis of the ACMG/AMP combining rules to assess how the availability of strong functional evidence could theoretically improve the ability to make a benign or pathogenic assertion. We follow this with analysis of actual evidence combinations met by variants through expert curations as part of the Clinical Genome Resource (ClinGen). We also examine the impact of functional evidence in a Bayesian adaptation of the ACMG/AMP framework. This lays the groundwork for an evidence-based prioritization of assay development and variant assessment by identifying genes and variants that may benefit the most from functional data.
Background The genetic variation underlying many heritable forms of cardiovascular disease is incompletely understood, even in patients with strong family history or early age at onset. Methods and Results We used whole exome sequencing to detect pathogenic variants in 55 patients with suspected monogenic forms of cardiovascular disease. Diagnostic analysis of established disease genes identified pathogenic variants in 21.8% of cases, and variants of uncertain significance in 34.5% of cases. Three patients harbored heterozygous nonsense or splice-site variants in the nucleoporin genes NUP37, NUP43, and NUP188, which have not been implicated previously in cardiac disease. We also identified a heterozygous splice site variant in the nuclear envelope gene SYNE1 in a child with severe dilated cardiomyopathy that underwent transplant, as well as in his affected father. To confirm a cardiovascular role for these candidate genes in vivo, we used morpholinos to reduce SYNE1, NUP37, and NUP43 gene expression in zebrafish. Morphant embryos displayed cardiac abnormalities, including pericardial edema and heart failure. Furthermore, lymphoblasts from the patient carrying a SYNE1 splice-site variant displayed changes in nuclear morphology and protein localization that are consistent with disruption of the nuclear envelope. Conclusions These data expand the repertoire of pathogenic variants associated with cardiovascular disease, and validate the diagnostic and research utility of whole exome sequencing. We identify NUP37, NUP43, and NUP188 as novel candidate genes for cardiovascular disease, and suggest that dysfunction of the nuclear envelope may be an under-recognized component of inherited cardiac disease in some cases.
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