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Anorectal atresia and Variants at Predicted Regulatory Sites in Candidate Genes
Author(s) -
Carter Tonia C.,
Kay Denise M.,
Browne Marilyn L.,
Liu Aiyi,
Romitti Paul A.,
Kuehn Devon,
Conley Mary R.,
Caggana Michele,
Druschel Charlotte M.,
Brody Lawrence C.,
Mills James L.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
annals of human genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.537
H-Index - 77
eISSN - 1469-1809
pISSN - 0003-4800
DOI - 10.1111/j.1469-1809.2012.00734.x
Subject(s) - biology , gli2 , atresia , genetics , candidate gene , cpg site , population , dna methylation , cancer research , bioinformatics , gene , transcription factor , gene expression , anatomy , medicine , environmental health
Summary Anorectal atresia is a serious birth defect of largely unknown etiology but candidate genes have been identified in animal studies and human syndromes. Because alterations in the activity of these genes might lead to anorectal atresia, we selected 71 common variants predicted to be in transcription factor binding sites, CpG windows, splice sites, and miRNA target sites of 25 candidate genes, and tested for their association with anorectal atresia. The study population comprised 150 anorectal atresia cases and 623 control infants without major malformations. Variants predicted to affect transcription factor binding, splicing, and DNA methylation in WNT3A , PCSK5 , TCF4 , MKKS , GLI2 , HOXD12 , and BMP4 were associated with anorectal atresia based on a nominal P value < 0.05. The GLI2 and BMP4 variants are reported to be moderately associated with gene expression changes (Spearman's rank correlation coefficients between −0.260 and 0.226). We did not find evidence for interaction between maternal pre‐pregnancy obesity and variants in MKKS , a gene previously associated with obesity, on the risk of anorectal atresia. Our results for MKKS support previously suggested associations with anorectal malformations. Our findings suggest that more research is needed to determine whether altered GLI2 and BMP4 expression is important in anorectal atresia in humans.

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