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Whole exome sequencing frequently detects a monogenic cause in early onset nephrolithiasis and nephrocalcinosis

Authors :
Deborah R. Stein
Weizhen Tan
Amar J. Majmundar
Richard P. Lifton
David Schapiro
Daniela A. Braun
Jan Halbritter
Christian Hanna
John A. Sayer
Margarita Halty
Avram Z. Traum
Sherif M. El-Desoky
Velibor Tasic
Shrikant Mane
Friedhelm Hildebrandt
Asaf Vivante
Michelle A. Baum
Shirlee Shril
Seema Hashmi
Michael A. J. Ferguson
Zoran Gucev
Caleb P. Nelson
Avi Katz
Ghaleb Daouk
Heon Yung Gee
Neveen A. Soliman
Tilman Jobst-Schwan
Michael J. Somers
Eugen Widmeier
Danko Milosevic
Ari J. Wassner
Jameela A. Kari
Hanan M. Fathy
Ankana Daga
Andrew L. Schwaderer
Jennifer A. Lawson
Jillian K. Warejko
Nancy Rodig
Source :
Kidney International. 93:204-213
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2018.

Abstract

The incidence of nephrolithiasis continues to rise. Previously, we showed that a monogenic cause could be detected in 11.4% of individuals with adult-onset nephrolithiasis or nephrocalcinosis and in 16.7-20.8% of individuals with onset before 18 years of age, using gene panel sequencing of 30 genes known to cause nephrolithiasis/nephrocalcinosis. To overcome the limitations of panel sequencing, we utilized whole exome sequencing in 51 families, who presented before age 25 years with at least one renal stone or with a renal ultrasound finding of nephrocalcinosis to identify the underlying molecular genetic cause of disease. In 15 of 51 families, we detected a monogenic causative mutation by whole exome sequencing. A mutation in seven recessive genes ( AGXT, ATP6V1B1, CLDN16, CLDN19, GRHPR, SLC3A1, SLC12A1 ), in one dominant gene ( SLC9A3R1 ), and in one gene ( SLC34A1 ) with both recessive and dominant inheritance was detected. Seven of the 19 different mutations were not previously described as disease-causing. In one family, a causative mutation in one of 117 genes that may represent phenocopies of nephrolithiasis-causing genes was detected. In nine of 15 families, the genetic diagnosis may have specific implications for stone management and prevention. Several factors that correlated with the higher detection rate in our cohort were younger age at onset of nephrolithiasis/nephrocalcinosis, presence of multiple affected members in a family, and presence of consanguinity. Thus, we established whole exome sequencing as an efficient approach toward a molecular genetic diagnosis in individuals with nephrolithiasis/nephrocalcinosis who manifest before age 25 years.

Details

ISSN :
00852538
Volume :
93
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Kidney International
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e987723df394e7715c11a2d25782a335