Rare mutations that affect the function of essential proteins constitute the majority of
Mendelian diseases. In addition, the overwhelming majority of disease-causing mutations in
Mendelian loci can be found within the coding region. With the goal of finding methods to best detect harmful mutations and successfully diagnose patients, researchers are looking to the exome for clues to aid in this process.
Whole-exome sequencing is a recent technology that has led to the discovery of various genetic disorders and increased the rate of diagnoses of patients with rare genetic disorders. Overall, whole-exome sequencing has allowed healthcare providers to diagnose 30–50% of patients who were thought to have rare Mendelian disorders. It has been suggested that whole-exome sequencing in clinical settings has many unexplored advantages. Not only can the exome increase our understanding of genetic patterns, but under clinical settings, it has the potential to the change in management of patients with rare and previously unknown disorders, allowing physicians to develop more targeted and personalized interventions. For example,
Bartter Syndrome, also known as salt-wasting nephropathy, is a hereditary disease of the kidney characterized by
hypotension (low blood pressure),
hypokalemia (low potassium), and
alkalosis (high blood pH) leading to muscle fatigue and varying levels of fatality. It is an example of a rare disease, affecting fewer than one per million people, whose patients have been positively impacted by whole-exome sequencing. Thanks to this method, patients who formerly did not exhibit the classical mutations associated with Bartter Syndrome were formally diagnosed with it after the discovery that the disease has mutations outside of the loci of interest. The
exome is the part of the
genome composed of
exons, the sequences which, when transcribed, remain within the mature
RNA after
introns are removed by
RNA splicing and contribute to the final protein product encoded by that gene. It consists of all DNA that is transcribed into mature RNA in cells of any type, as distinct from the
transcriptome, which is the RNA that has been transcribed only in a specific cell population. The exome of the
human genome consists of roughly 180,000
exons constituting about 1% of the total
genome, or about 30 megabases of
DNA. Though composing a very small fraction of the
genome,
mutations in the exome are thought to harbor 85% of
mutations that have a large effect on disease.
Exome sequencing has proved to be an efficient strategy to determine the genetic basis of more than two dozen
Mendelian or
single gene disorders. == See also ==