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[Preprint]. 2024 Apr 24:2024.04.22.24305780. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2024.04.22.24305780

Mind the gap: the relevance of the genome reference to resolve rare and pathogenic inversions

Kristine Bilgrav Saether, Jesper Eisfeldt, Jesse Bengtsson, Ming Yin Lun, Christopher M Grochowski, Medhat Mahmoud, Hsiao-Tuan Chao, Jill A Rosenfeld, Pengfei Liu, Jakob Schuy, Adam Ameur; Undiagnosed Diseases Network, James Paul Hwang, Fritz J Sedlazeck, Weimin Bi, Ronit Marom, Ann Nordgren, Claudia MB Carvalho, Anna Lindstrand
PMCID: PMC11071548  PMID: 38712270

Abstract

Both long-read genome sequencing (lrGS) and the recently published Telomere to Telomere (T2T) reference genome provide increased coverage and resolution across repetitive regions promising heightened structural variant detection and improved mapping. Inversions (INV), intrachromosomal segments which are rotated 180° and inserted back into the same chromosome, are a class of structural variants particularly challenging to detect due to their copy-number neutral state and association with repetitive regions. Inversions represent about 1/20 of all balanced structural chromosome aberrations and can lead to disease by gene disruption or altering regulatory regions of dosage sensitive genes in cis .

Here we remapped the genome data from six individuals carrying unsolved cytogenetically detected inversions. An INV6 and INV10 were resolved using GRCh38 and T2T-CHM13. Finally, an INV9 required optical genome mapping, de novo assembly of lrGS data and T2T-CHM13. This inversion disrupted intron 25 of EHMT1, confirming a diagnosis of Kleefstra syndrome 1 (MIM#610253).

These three inversions, only mappable in specific references, prompted us to investigate the presence and population frequencies of differential reference regions (DRRs) between T2T-CHM13, GRCh37, GRCh38, the chimpanzee and bonobo, and hundreds of megabases of DRRs were identified.

Our results emphasize the significance of the chosen reference genome and the added benefits of lrGS and optical genome mapping in solving rearrangements in challenging regions of the genome. This is particularly important for inversions and may impact clinical diagnostics.

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