FORGE Canada Consortium: Outcomes of a 2-Year National Rare-Disease Gene-Discovery Project

Chandree L. Beaulieu(University of Ottawa), Jacek Majewski(McGill University), Jeremy Schwartzentruber(McGill University and Génome Québec Innovation Centre), Mark E. Samuels(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Sainte-Justine), Bridget A. Fernandez(Memorial University of Newfoundland), François P. Bernier(University of Calgary), Michael Brudno(University of Toronto), Bartha Maria Knoppers(McGill University), Janet Marcadier(University of Ottawa), David A. Dyment(University of Ottawa), Shelin Adam(University of British Columbia), Dennis E. Bulman(University of Ottawa), Steven J.M. Jones(Canada's Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre), Denise Avard(McGill University), Minh Thu Nguyen(McGill University), François Rousseau(Centre hospitalier universitaire de Québec), Christian R. Marshall(Hospital for Sick Children), Richard F. Wintle(Hospital for Sick Children), Yaoqing Shen(Canada's Michael Smith Genome Sciences Centre), Stephen W. Scherer(University of Toronto), Jan M. Friedman(University of British Columbia), Jacques L. Michaud(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Sainte-Justine), Kym M. Boycott(University of Ottawa)
The American Journal of Human Genetics
June 1, 2014
Cited by 250Open Access
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Abstract

Inherited monogenic disease has an enormous impact on the well-being of children and their families. Over half of the children living with one of these conditions are without a molecular diagnosis because of the rarity of the disease, the marked clinical heterogeneity, and the reality that there are thousands of rare diseases for which causative mutations have yet to be identified. It is in this context that in 2010 a Canadian consortium was formed to rapidly identify mutations causing a wide spectrum of pediatric-onset rare diseases by using whole-exome sequencing. The FORGE (Finding of Rare Disease Genes) Canada Consortium brought together clinicians and scientists from 21 genetics centers and three science and technology innovation centers from across Canada. From nation-wide requests for proposals, 264 disorders were selected for study from the 371 submitted; disease-causing variants (including in 67 genes not previously associated with human disease; 41 of these have been genetically or functionally validated, and 26 are currently under study) were identified for 146 disorders over a 2-year period. Here, we present our experience with four strategies employed for gene discovery and discuss FORGE's impact in a number of realms, from clinical diagnostics to the broadening of the phenotypic spectrum of many diseases to the biological insight gained into both disease states and normal human development. Lastly, on the basis of this experience, we discuss the way forward for rare-disease genetic discovery both in Canada and internationally.


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