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Targeted resequencing and systematic in vivo functional testing identifies rare variants in MEIS1 as significant contributors to restless legs syndrome

Authors :
Maria Kousi
Annette Peters
Erik Tilch
Wolfgang H. Oertel
Ingo Fietze
Nicholas Katsanis
Klaus Berger
Juliane Winkelmann
Birgit Högl
Claudia Trenkwalder
Cornelius G. Bachmann
Perciliz L. Tan
Eva C. Schulte
Thomas Meitinger
Birgit Frauscher
Franziska Knauf
Bertram Müller-Myhsok
Christian Gieger
Alexander Zimprich
Peter Lichtner
Magdolna Hornyak
Source :
Am. J. Hum. Genet. 95, 85-95 (2014), AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Cell Press, 2014.

Abstract

Restless legs syndrome (RLS) is a common neurologic condition characterized by nocturnal dysesthesias and an urge to move, affecting the legs. RLS is a complex trait, for which genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have identified common susceptibility alleles of modest (OR 1.2-1.7) risk at six genomic loci. Among these, variants in MEIS1 have emerged as the largest risk factors for RLS, suggesting that perturbations in this transcription factor might be causally related to RLS susceptibility. To establish this causality, direction of effect, and total genetic burden of MEIS1, we interrogated 188 case subjects and 182 control subjects for rare alleles not captured by previous GWASs, followed by genotyping of ∼3,000 case subjects and 3,000 control subjects, and concluded with systematic functionalization of all discovered variants using a previously established invivo model of neurogenesis. We observed a significant excess of rare MEIS1 variants in individuals with RLS. Subsequent assessment of all nonsynonymous variants by invivo complementation revealed an excess of loss-of-function alleles in individuals with RLS. Strikingly, these alleles compromised the function of the canonical MEIS1 splice isoform but were irrelevant to an isoform known to utilize an alternative 3' sequence. Our data link MEIS1 loss of function to the etiopathology of RLS, highlight how combined sequencing and systematic functional annotation of rare variation at GWAS loci can detect risk burden, and offer a plausible explanation for the specificity of phenotypic expressivity of loss-of-function alleles at a locus broadly necessary for neurogenesis and neurodevelopment.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Am. J. Hum. Genet. 95, 85-95 (2014), AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....52943f73d4055afbf59a5f821c97ff1e