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Acidosis and Deafness in Patients with Recessive Mutations in FOXI1
Author(s) -
Sven Enerbäck,
Daniel Nilsson,
Noel Edwards,
Mikael Heglind,
Sumaya Alkanderi,
Emma Ashton,
Asma Deeb,
Feras E.B. Kokash,
Abdul Rahim Ali Bakhsh,
William van’t Hoff,
Stephen B. Walsh,
Felice D’Arco,
Arezoo Daryadel,
Soline Bourgeois,
Carsten A. Wagner,
Robert Kleta,
Detlef Böckenhauer,
John A. Sayer
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of the american society of nephrology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.451
H-Index - 279
eISSN - 1533-3450
pISSN - 1046-6673
DOI - 10.1681/asn.2017080840
Subject(s) - distal renal tubular acidosis , missense mutation , renal tubular acidosis , genetics , biology , mutation , medicine , acidosis , gene
Maintenance of the composition of inner ear fluid and regulation of electrolytes and acid-base homeostasis in the collecting duct system of the kidney require an overlapping set of membrane transport proteins regulated by the forkhead transcription factor FOXI1. In two unrelated consanguineous families, we identified three patients with novel homozygous missense mutations in FOXI1 (p.L146F and p.R213P) predicted to affect the highly conserved DNA binding domain. Patients presented with early-onset sensorineural deafness and distal renal tubular acidosis. In cultured cells, the mutations reduced the DNA binding affinity of FOXI1, which hence, failed to adequately activate genes crucial for normal inner ear function and acid-base regulation in the kidney. A substantial proportion of patients with a clinical diagnosis of inherited distal renal tubular acidosis has no identified causative mutations in currently known disease genes. Our data suggest that recessive mutations in FOXI1 can explain the disease in a subset of these patients.

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