Literature DB >> 20598273

Differential contributions of rare and common, coding and noncoding Ret mutations to multifactorial Hirschsprung disease liability.

Eileen Sproat Emison1, Merce Garcia-Barcelo, Elizabeth A Grice, Francesca Lantieri, Jeanne Amiel, Grzegorz Burzynski, Raquel M Fernandez, Li Hao, Carl Kashuk, Kristen West, Xiaoping Miao, Paul K H Tam, Paola Griseri, Isabella Ceccherini, Anna Pelet, Anne-Sophie Jannot, Loic de Pontual, Alexandra Henrion-Caude, Stanislas Lyonnet, Joke B G M Verheij, Robert M W Hofstra, Guillermo Antiñolo, Salud Borrego, Andrew S McCallion, Aravinda Chakravarti.   

Abstract

The major gene for Hirschsprung disease (HSCR) encodes the receptor tyrosine kinase RET. In a study of 690 European- and 192 Chinese-descent probands and their parents or controls, we demonstrate the ubiquity of a >4-fold susceptibility from a C-->T allele (rs2435357: p = 3.9 x 10(-43) in European ancestry; p = 1.1 x 10(-21) in Chinese samples) that probably arose once within the intronic RET enhancer MCS+9.7. With in vitro assays, we now show that the T variant disrupts a SOX10 binding site within MCS+9.7 that compromises RET transactivation. The T allele, with a control frequency of 20%-30%/47% and case frequency of 54%-62%/88% in European/Chinese-ancestry individuals, is involved in all forms of HSCR. It is marginally associated with proband gender (p = 0.13) and significantly so with length of aganglionosis (p = 7.6 x 10(-5)) and familiality (p = 6.2 x 10(-4)). The enhancer variant is more frequent in the common forms of male, short-segment, and simplex families whereas multiple, rare, coding mutations are the norm in the less common and more severe forms of female, long-segment, and multiplex families. The T variant also increases penetrance in patients with rare RET coding mutations. Thus, both rare and common mutations, individually and together, make contributions to the risk of HSCR. The distribution of RET variants in diverse HSCR patients suggests a "cellular-recessive" genetic model where both RET alleles' function is compromised. The RET allelic series, and its genotype-phenotype correlations, shows that success in variant identification in complex disorders may strongly depend on which patients are studied. Copyright 2010 The American Society of Human Genetics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20598273      PMCID: PMC2896767          DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2010.06.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Hum Genet        ISSN: 0002-9297            Impact factor:   11.025


  40 in total

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10.  Induction of RET dependent and independent pro-inflammatory programs in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells from Hirschsprung patients.

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