Molecular Dissection of Structural Variations Involved in Antithrombin Deficiency

J Mol Diagn. 2022 May;24(5):462-475. doi: 10.1016/j.jmoldx.2022.01.009. Epub 2022 Feb 23.

Abstract

Inherited antithrombin deficiency, the most severe form of thrombophilia, is predominantly caused by variants in SERPINC1. Few causal structural variants have been described, usually detected by multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification or cytogenetic arrays, which only define the gain or loss and the approximate size and location. This study has done a complete dissection of the structural variants affecting SERPINC1 of 39 unrelated patients with antithrombin deficiency using multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification, comparative genome hybridization array, long-range PCR, and whole genome nanopore sequencing. Structural variants, in all cases only affecting one allele, were deleterious and caused a severe type I deficiency. Most defects were deletions affecting exons of SERPINC1 (82.1%), but the whole cohort was heterogeneous, as tandem duplications, deletion of introns, or retrotransposon insertions were also detected. Their size was also variable, ranging from 193 bp to 8 Mb, and in 54% of the cases involved neighboring genes. All but two structural variants had repetitive elements and/or microhomologies in their breakpoints, suggesting a common mechanism of formation. This study also suggested regions recurrently involved in structural variants causing antithrombin deficiency and found three structural variants with a founder effect: the insertion of a retrotransposon, duplication of exon 6, and a 20-gene deletion. Finally, nanopore sequencing was determined to be the most appropriate method to identify and characterize all structural variants at nucleotide level, independently of their size or type.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Antithrombin III Deficiency* / genetics
  • Antithrombins
  • Exons / genetics
  • Humans
  • Introns
  • Retroelements*

Substances

  • Antithrombins
  • Retroelements