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Exome survey of individuals affected by VATER/VACTERL with renal phenotypes identifies phenocopies and novel candidate genes

Authors :
Rufeng Dai
Shrikant Mane
Marcello Scala
Shirlee Shril
Alina C. Hilger
Dervla M. Connaughton
Franziska Kause
Heidi L. Rehm
Bernd Hoppe
Gianluca Piatelli
Stefanie Märzheuser
Makiko Nakayama
Caroline M. Kolvenbach
Richard P. Lifton
Vincenzo Nigro
Luca Schierbaum
Thomas M. Kitzler
Friedhelm Hildebrandt
Eberhard Schmiedeke
Gabriel C. Dworschak
Sophia Schneider
Heiko Reutter
Annalaura Torella
Valeria Capra
Amelie T. van der Ven
Ronen Schneider
Nina Mann
Andrea Accogli
Kolvenbach, C. M.
van der Ven, A. T.
Kause, F.
Shril, S.
Scala, M.
Connaughton, D. M.
Mann, N.
Nakayama, M.
Dai, R.
Kitzler, T. M.
Schneider, R.
Schierbaum, L.
Schneider, S.
Accogli, A.
Torella, A.
Piatelli, G.
Nigro, V.
Capra, V.
Hoppe, B.
Marzheuser, S.
Schmiedeke, E.
Rehm, H. L.
Mane, S.
Lifton, R. P.
Dworschak, G. C.
Hilger, A. C.
Reutter, H.
Hildebrandt, F.
Source :
Am J Med Genet A
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The acronym VATER/VACTERL refers to the rare non-random association of the following component features (CFs): vertebral defects (V), anorectal malformations (ARM) (A), cardiac anomalies (C), tracheoesophageal fistula with or without esophageal atresia (TE), renal malformations (R), and limb anomalies (L). For the clinical diagnosis the presence of at least three CFs is required, individuals presenting with only two CFs have been categorized as VATER/VACTERL-like. The majority of VATER/VACTERL individuals displays a renal phenotype. Hitherto, variants in FGF8, FOXF1, HOXD13, LPP, TRAP1, PTEN and ZIC3 have been associated with the VATER/VACTERL association; however, large-scale re-sequencing could only confirm TRAP1 and ZIC3 as VATER/VACTERL disease genes, both associated with a renal phenotype. METHODS: In this study, we performed exome sequencing in 21 individuals and their families with a renal VATER/VACTERL or VATER/VACTERL-like phenotype to identify potentially novel genetic causes. RESULTS: Exome analysis identified biallelic and X-chromosomal hemizygous potentially pathogenic variants in six individuals (29%) in B9D1, FREM1, ZNF157, SP8, ACOT9, and TTLL11, respectively. The online tool GeneMatcher revealed another individual with a variant in ZNF157. CONCLUSION: Our study suggests six biallelic and X-chromosomal hemizygous VATER/VACTERL disease gene implicating all six genes in the expression of human renal malformations.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Am J Med Genet A
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....72bd4d2d86317627cfbf9ccf0ecc14ba