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Whole exome sequencing identifies causative mutations in the majority of consanguineous or familial cases with childhood-onset increased renal echogenicity
Author(s) -
Daniela A. Braun,
Markus Schueler,
Jan Halbritter,
Heon Yung Gee,
Jonathan D. Porath,
Jennifer A. Lawson,
Rannar Airik,
Shirlee Shril,
Susan J. Allen,
Deborah R. Stein,
Adila Al Kindy,
Bodo B. Beck,
Nurcan Cengız,
Khemchand N Moorani,
Fatih Özaltın,
Seema Hashmi,
John A. Sayer,
Detlef Böckenhauer,
Neveen A. Soliman,
Edgar A. Otto,
Richard P. Lifton,
Friedhelm Hildebrandt
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
kidney international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.499
H-Index - 276
eISSN - 1523-1755
pISSN - 0085-2538
DOI - 10.1038/ki.2015.317
Subject(s) - exome sequencing , exome , medicine , genetics , consanguinity , mutation , echogenicity , biology , pediatrics , ultrasonography , gene , surgery
Chronically increased echogenicity on renal ultrasound is a sensitive early finding of chronic kidney disease that can be detected before manifestation of other symptoms. Increased echogenicity, however, is not specific for a certain etiology of chronic kidney disease. Here, we performed whole exome sequencing in 79 consanguineous or familial cases of suspected nephronophthisis in order to determine the underlying molecular disease cause. In 50 cases, there was a causative mutation in a known monogenic disease gene. In 32 of these cases whole exome sequencing confirmed the diagnosis of a nephronophthisis-related ciliopathy. In 8 cases it revealed the diagnosis of a renal tubulopathy. The remaining 10 cases were identified as Alport syndrome (4), autosomal-recessive polycystic kidney disease (2), congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (3), and APECED syndrome (1). In 5 families, in whom mutations in known monogenic genes were excluded, we applied homozygosity mapping for variant filtering and identified 5 novel candidate genes (RBM48, FAM186B, PIAS1, INCENP, and RCOR1) for renal ciliopathies. Thus, whole exome sequencing allows the detection of the causative mutation in 2/3 of affected individuals, thereby presenting the etiologic diagnosis, and allows identification of novel candidate genes.

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