Dysregulation of FOXG1 by ring chromosome 14

In this study we performed molecular characterization of a patient with an extra ring chromosome derived from chromosome 14, with severe intellectual disability, epilepsy, cerebral paresis, tetraplegia, osteoporosis and severe thoraco-lumbal scoliosis. Array CGH analysis did not show any genomic imbalance but conventional karyotyping and FISH analysis revealed the presence of an interstitial 14q12q24.3 deletion and an extra ring chromosome derived from the deleted material. The deletion and ring chromosome breakpoints were identified at base-pair level by mate-pair and Sanger sequencing. Both breakpoints disrupted putative long non-coding RNA genes (TCONS00022561;RP11-148E17.1) of unknown function. However, the proximal breakpoint was 225 kb downstream of the forkhead box G1 gene (FOXG1), within the known regulatory landscape of FOXG1. The patient represents the first case of a r(14) arising from an interstitial excision where the phenotype is compatible with dysregulation of FOXG1. In turn, the phenotypic overlap between the present case, the FOXG1 syndrome and the r(14) syndrome supports that dysregulation of FOXG1 may contribute to the classical r(14)-syndrome, likely mediated by dynamic mosaicism.


Background
Ring chromosome 14 (r(14)) syndrome is a rare cytogenetic condition leading to a complex array of phenotypic alterations mainly characterized by growth retardation, intellectual disability, distinct facial dysmorphism with broad and flat nasal bridge, prominent forehead, broad philtrum and thin upper lip, short stature, microcephaly, scoliosis and ocular abnormalities such as abnormal retinal pigmentation, retinitis pigmentosa, strabismus, glaucoma and abnormal macula. Furthermore the patients suffer from intellectual disability, with aggressive and hyperactive behavior in some cases. Another highly characteristic finding is drug resistant epilepsy with onset during the first year of life [1][2][3][4][5][6][7]. Less than 80 cases have been reported in the literature and the molecular mechanisms leading to this phenotype remain to be elucidated.
Forkhead Box G1 gene (FOXG1) encodes a brainexpressed winged-helix transcriptional repressor, shown to be critical for forebrain development. The gene is located on 14q12 and disruption and/or dysregulation of FOXG1 has been shown to cause the FOXG1-syndrome [8][9][10][11][12][13][14], characterized by severe postnatal microcephaly, early-onset epilepsy, brain abnormalities, severe intellectual disability, with absent or minimal language development, deficient social interactions including poor eye contact denoting a syndromic form of autism, dyskinesia with mixed features of athetosis, chorea and dystonia, epilepsy, poor sleep patterns, irritability, excessive episodes of crying and frequent gastro-oesophageal reflux [8,9,[12][13][14][15]. In contrast to the r(14)-syndrome, only a mild distinct facial dysmorphism is observed in the FOXG1-syndrome, and only in patients with deletions [12][13][14][15][16]. Here we report a patient with a deleted chromosome 14 and an extra ring chromosome, where mate pair sequencing revealed a balanced excision of a5 0 Mb segment of chromosome 14, with truncation of the FOXG1 regulatory landscape, and a phenotype overlapping with the r(14)-syndrome.

Case presentation
Our patient (deceased in 2009) was an 18 year-old female patient. She was born from healthy unrelated parents after an uncomplicated pregnancy. She presented with delayed psychomotor development from approximately 2 months of age. Subsequently, severe intellectual disability (ID), cerebral paresis, tetraplegia, osteoporosis, severe thoraco-lumbal scoliosis, loss of vision, no language and no eye-contact became clinically apparent. The patient was permanently wheelchair bound. In addition, the patient was suffering from treatment-resistant epilepsy with generalized tonic-clonic seizures (GTCS), often in series, with onset at about 1 year-of-age. Despite medical treatment the patient experienced weekly seizures throughout her life. Dysmorphic facial features were not mentioned in the medical record. Computed tomography, performed at 1 year of age, showed microcephaly. Brain magnetic resonance imaging performed at 3 years of age showed a central and cortical atrophy and hypoplasia of corpus callosum.

Karyotypyng and CGH
Conventional cytogenetic analysis performed during childhood showed a deletion of 14q24.2 together with a marker chromosome. The karyotype was reported as: 47,XX,del (14)(q24.2) + mar. Genome-Wide Human SNP array 6.0 (Affymetrix, Santa Clara, CA, USA) analyzed with Genotyping Console version 3.0 (GTC 3.0, Affymetrix, Santa Clara, CA, USA) did not show any unbalanced features in the genome (data not shown). Since no copy number variations were detected by array screening, the ring chromosome most likely consisted of the material missing from the derivative chromosome 14, with the reported karyotype: 47,XX, del(14)(q21q32.1) + r(14)? (Figure 1).

Mate-pair and sanger sequencing
In order to fine map the chromosomal breakpoints, we performed Next Generation mate-pair sequencing  Human Genome Assembly hg19 (GRCh37), using BWA [17]. Using SVDetect to search for structural variations [18], we identified four read-pairs defining the breakpoints on the r(14) chromosome and the del(14) chromosome, with a resolution of appr. 1 kb at the 14q12 breakpoint, and 332 bp at the 14q24.3 breakpoint (Figure 2c). The breakpoints were subsequently Sanger sequenced to identify their exact locations. Primers were designed with the use of the Primer3 software [19]. The PCR primer sequences were: D1: ttgatgcaaaaatcctcaataaaa (deleted derivative chromosome14, forward) and D3: gcttttcatgagctggtgtgt (deleted derivative chromosome 14, reverse). Ring specific primers were: A1: taaaacagccaaaaattgattaaa (r (14), forward) and A3: caagccatctcacattacacc (r (14), reverse) ( Figure 2a). An internal sequencing primer of the D1-D3 fragment (D_internal) was: gaaggacctcttcaaggagaa (deleted derivative chromosome 14, forward). Using these primers (Figure 2a), we obtained PCR products from the patient's DNA but not from control DNA (Figure 2b). Sequences were read on an automated capillary sequencer (ABI 3130XL, Life Technologies) and analyzed with Chromas Pro version 1.5 (Technelysium Pty Ltd).

Fluorescence in Situ Hybridization (FISH)
We validated the MPS results by Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization (FISH) performed according to standard protocols using 250 ng biotin-14-dATP-labelled bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs). We used the following BAC probes: RP11-24K5 (14q24.1), RP11-950C14 (14q24.3), RP11-35D12 (14q24.1) mapping to the predicted excised 14q24-region. The FISH analysis confirmed that the ring chromosome was composed of the excised region from 14q ( Figure 3a). In order to exclude the possibility that a centromere on the ring chromosome contained centromeric chromosome 14 material, we performed FISH using α-satellite DNA probes (Oncor, Gaithersburg, MD). As expected, alpha-satellite signals were observed on all chromosomes except on the ring (Figure 3b). Since the ring was detected in all cells suggesting that it was stable, we presume that α nonsatellite DNA containing neocentromere has been formed.

Discussion
We describe a severely affected female patient with a balanced chromosomal rearrangement consisting of an interstitial excision of chromosome 14q12q24 with subsequent ring formation. The proximal breakpoint at 14q12 disrupted a predicted lncRNA gene located in a gene desert approximately 225 kb downstream of FOXG1. Several patients with the FOXG1-syndrome have been reported with deletions or balanced rearrangements in the same downstream regulatory area of FOXG1 [e.g. 8,13]. Thus, the present breakpoint is located between FOXG1 and the t(2;14)(q13;q13) breakpoint described in ref. 13 (Figure 2e), supporting the involvement of a long-range position effect, where distally located cis-regulatory elements are moved in trans with respect to the FOXG1-promoter [21]. The FOXG1-syndrome (former congenital variant of Rett syndrome) is a severe neurodevelopmental disorder classified by early onset of symptoms, including psychomotor delay, epilepsy and microcephaly [8][9][10][11][12][13][14]. These features were all present in our patient, along with many of the features of the r(14)-syndrome (Table 1). In contrast to the distinct facial features of the r(14)-syndrome, there was no report of dysmorphic features in our patient. This correlates with other reports of non-dysmorphic patients with the FOXG1-syndrome. Both the proximal and distal breakpoints disrupted predicted lncRNA genes. However, there is no known phenotype associated with either of these ncRNA genes, and the patient does not have any major  clinical feature that has not been reported previously in the FOXG1or r(14)-syndromes. It has been suggested that genes within the 14q11q13 region determine the visual impairment and epilepsy associated with the r(14)-syndrome, with FOXG1 being one of the candidate genes [7]. Indeed, the considerable phenotypic overlap between the present case, the FOXG1-syndrome and the r(14)-syndrome (Table 1) suggests that dysregulation of FOXG1 may be a significant factor behind the classical r(14)syndrome.

Conclusions
We present a balanced rearrangement with an excision of 14q12q24, and an extra ring chromosome composed of the excised material. The severe clinical features are compatible with the FOXG1-syndrome, in line with the localization of the 14q12-breakpoint 225 kb downstream of FOXG1, within the regulatory domain where breakpoints are known to dysregulateFOXG1 by long range position effects. Moreover, the clinical overlap between our case, the FOXG1-syndrome and the classical r(14)syndrome, supports that dysregulation of FOXG1 may be an important factor involved in the clinical features of the classical r(14)-syndrome. Since classical r (14) chromosomes would rarely have breakpoints within the FOXG1-regulatory domain, a likely mechanism for such a dysregulation may be the dynamic mosaicism associated with ring chromosomes, where sister chromatid exchanges within the ring lead to interlocked rings with subsequent breakage/reunion and/or aneuploidy mosaicism. Such a mechanism could also be relevant for the clinical features associated with other ring chromosomes, e.g. the development of tumors associated with the loss of specific tumor suppressors [22], and the epilepsy associated with loss of e.g. CHRNA4 and/or KCNQ2 in ring chromosome 20 mosaicism [23].

Consent
The study was approved by the Ethics Committee of Western Sealand (SJ-91), and written informed consent was obtained from the patient's parents.