Nonrecurrent MECP2 duplications mediated by genomic architecture-driven DNA breaks and break-induced replication repair

  1. Marijke Bauters1,2,10,
  2. Hilde Van Esch3,10,
  3. Michael J. Friez4,
  4. Odile Boespflug-Tanguy5,
  5. Martin Zenker6,
  6. Angela M. Vianna-Morgante7,
  7. Carla Rosenberg7,
  8. Jaakko Ignatius8,
  9. Martine Raynaud9,
  10. Karen Hollanders1,2,
  11. Karen Govaerts1,2,
  12. Kris Vandenreijt1,2,
  13. Florence Niel5,
  14. Pierre Blanc5,
  15. Roger E. Stevenson4,
  16. Jean-Pierre Fryns3,
  17. Peter Marynen1,2,
  18. Charles E. Schwartz4, and
  19. Guy Froyen1,2,11
  1. 1 Human Genome Laboratory, Department for Molecular and Developmental Genetics, VIB, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium;
  2. 2 Human Genome Laboratory, Department of Human Genetics, K.U.Leuven, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium;
  3. 3 Department of Human Genetics, University Hospital Gasthuisberg, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium;
  4. 4 JC Self Research Institute of Human Genetics, Greenwood Genetic Center, Greenwood, South Carolina 29646, USA;
  5. 5 Centre Hospitalier Universitaire, Clermont-FD, Génétique Humaine, F-63003 Clermont-Ferrand, France;
  6. 6 Institute of Human Genetics, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, D-91054 Erlangen, Germany;
  7. 7 Department of Genetics and Evolutionary Biology, Institute of Biosciences, University of São Paulo, SP-05508-900 São Paulo, Brazil;
  8. 8 Department of Clinical Genetics, Oulu University Hospital and Oulu University, FIN-90221 Oulu, Finland;
  9. 9 Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Tours, Service de Génétique, F-37044 Tours, France
  1. 10 These authors contributed equally to this work.

Abstract

Recurrent submicroscopic genomic copy number changes are the result of nonallelic homologous recombination (NAHR). Nonrecurrent aberrations, however, can result from different nonexclusive recombination-repair mechanisms. We previously described small microduplications at Xq28 containing MECP2 in four male patients with a severe neurological phenotype. Here, we report on the fine-mapping and breakpoint analysis of 16 unique microduplications. The size of the overlapping copy number changes varies between 0.3 and 2.3 Mb, and FISH analysis on three patients demonstrated a tandem orientation. Although eight of the 32 breakpoint regions coincide with low-copy repeats, none of the duplications are the result of NAHR. Bioinformatics analysis of the breakpoint regions demonstrated a 2.5-fold higher frequency of Alu interspersed repeats as compared with control regions, as well as a very high GC content (53%). Unexpectedly, we obtained the junction in only one patient by long-range PCR, which revealed nonhomologous end joining as the mechanism. Breakpoint analysis in two other patients by inverse PCR and subsequent array comparative genomic hybridization analysis demonstrated the presence of a second duplicated region more telomeric at Xq28, of which one copy was inserted in between the duplicated MECP2 regions. These data suggest a two-step mechanism in which part of Xq28 is first inserted near the MECP2 locus, followed by breakage-induced replication with strand invasion of the normal sister chromatid. Our results indicate that the mechanism by which copy number changes occur in regions with a complex genomic architecture can yield complex rearrangements.

Footnotes

  • 11 Corresponding author.

    11 E-mail guy.froyen{at}med.kuleuven.be; fax 32-16-347166.

  • [Supplemental material is available online at www.genome.org.]

  • Article published online before print. Article and publication date are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.075903.107.

    • Received December 21, 2007.
    • Accepted March 17, 2008.
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