Founder effects have been described in SLSJ for several genetic disorders
[
12-
18], which is not unexpected given its unique population history
[
9]. Here, we report a single
PEX6 mutation in all ZS cases in French-Canadians from the SLSJ region. There is strong evidence that this is a founder mutation given the elevated incidence of ZS in the population and no
PEX6 mutation hotspots have been identified large patient cohorts
[
25]. In addition, three-generation pedigrees of the four affected families from SLSJ did not reveal any close relationship that could otherwise explain the observed homozygosity for this mutation.
PEX6 is the second most frequent gene involved with 10-16% of all ZS cases. In more than 100 ZS patients with
PEX6 mutations, c.802_815del was observed only 3 times in other populations, in patients with compound heterozygosity for this allele and a second, different
PEX6 allele. One was a US patient with unknown ethnicity
[
26] (also listed as
http://www.dbpex.org, PEX6_30001), the second was of French-Canadian descent but not clearly from the SLSJ region (
http://www.dbpex.org, PEX6_00039), and the third was from a European population
[
25]. In cells from the US patient, Matsumoto and colleagues showed the presence of a shorter
PEX6 transcript due to the loss of 264 nucleotides at the end of exon 1 by RT-PCR. We confirmed the presence of a shorter
PEX6 transcript by Northern blot analysis in cultured fibroblasts from patient B1. However, the sequencing of RT-PCR products showed two different transcripts corresponding to the loss of terminal sequence of exon 1, c.226_882 and c.619_882. Therefore, the mutation should be described as (c.802_815del, p.[Val207_Gln294del, Val76_Gln294del]). Splice site prediction (NetGene2, v2.4)
[
27] performed on exon 1 revealed the main donor splice site at position c.882 as well as two additional cryptic splice sites at c.226 and c.619. Additional cryptic splice sites in large exons are not unusual
[
28]. Based on the ESEfinder algorithm
[
29,
30], the SF2/ASF exonic splicing enhancer is predicted to bind the c.800-806 5’-CTGACGG-3’ sequence. Therefore, the c.802_815 deletion would destroy the SF2/ASF binding site needed for donor splice site definition at c.882, favoring the use of alternative cryptic splice sites. The predicted in-frame deleted PEX6 proteins are likely to be unstable and degraded given the classical Zellweger phenotype of these patients and negligible PEX6 protein found by immunoblotting. The 102-kDa band observed is unlikely to represent the product of the shortened transcript seen in c.802_815del mutants given that it was observed in two different
PEX6 null mutants not containing this allele. Moreover, the predicted in-frame loss of 88 amino acids (c.619 to 882) would lead to a protein of approximately 95-kDa or even smaller if the second predicted cryptic splice site is used (c.226), and this was not observed on the immunoblots.
Based on molecularly confirmed ZS cases over a 20

year-period, we estimated the incidence of ZS in SLSJ region to 1 / 12,191. To our knowledge, this is the highest incidence worldwide, although our confidence interval remains large (1/5,224 – 1/37,544). Since there is a single genetics service in SLSJ region, it is unlikely that recognized cases were missed. Moreover, no additional cases were identified through the Quebec reference center for analysis of very long chain fatty acids in blood samples. Compared to SLSJ, incidence of ZS has been estimated to 1 / 50,000 in the United States based on data from the reference center, the Kennedy-Krieger Institute, Baltimore, Maryland
[
2]. Data from the PBD reference center in Japan, showed a much lower incidence with 24 cases over a 10-year period (1 / 500,000); however, the incidence in the Okinawa Islands, 1/30,000, appears much higher
[
31]. An increased incidence of ZS was also proposed in a small Arab community (Karaite) inside Israel
[
32].
The increased incidence of ZS and the identification of a single
PEX6 founder mutation in French-Canadians of SLSJ raise the possibility of population-based carrier screening. The lethality of the condition, availability of prenatal diagnosis, and a technologic platform and infrastructure for population screening in SLSJ, argue in favour of carrier screening. Currently, voluntary population carrier screening is offered in SLSJ for four autosomal recessive conditions with increased incidence (tyrosinemia type I, autosomal recessive spastic ataxia of Charlevoix-Saguenay, sensorimotor polyneuropathy with or without agenesis of corpus callosum and Leigh syndrome French Canadian type). If we consider ZS, with an
a priori estimated carrier frequency of 1/55, about 3,000 individuals will have to be screened to find one couple at 25% risk of having an affected child. This is about the number of live births per year in SLSJ (
http://www.stat.gouv.qc.ca/). However, larger scale studies that more accurately assess
PEX6 mutation carrier frequency in French-Canadians of SLSJ are needed prior to discussing the implementation of
PEX6 mutation screening.
Identification of mutations in ZSD samples is currently done using hierarchal Sanger sequencing of a subset of
PEX gene exons or cell complementation assays followed by sequencing of the identified mutant
PEX gene
[
4,
5]. Both methods are time consuming and associated costs limit test accessibility, particularly for Sanger sequencing. NGS technologies enable the simultaneous analysis of hundreds of genes from multiple individuals at a favourable cost per test
[
33,
34]. In our present study, we used targeted NGS to screen all known
PEX genes for sequence variants and identify the candidate founder mutation. Validation of our
PEX gene panel showed that mutations could be missed when coverage was lower than 20 reads per base
[
35]. Consequently, deep sequencing (>400X) was obtained to ensure that all targeted sequences were covered and to minimize risk of false negative calls considering variability of read numbers across targeted sequences. Given the size of this gene panel (<100-Kb), the protocol could be adapted to personal next generation sequencers, which require modest infrastructure investment
[
34]. The rapid and cost-effective nature of targeted NGS makes it an attractive alternative to current
PEX gene mutation detection methods and may afford greater sensitivity in cases where biochemical diagnosis is illusive. For example, Ebberink and colleagues reported variations in Pex11β causing a ZSD phenotype in a patient who failed to show consistent plasma biochemical abnormalities indicative of global peroxisome dysfunction
[
3].