Literature DB >> 22190896

Mutations in SDCCAG8/NPHP10 Cause Bardet-Biedl Syndrome and Are Associated with Penetrant Renal Disease and Absent Polydactyly.

E Schaefer1, A Zaloszyc, J Lauer, M Durand, F Stutzmann, Y Perdomo-Trujillo, C Redin, V Bennouna Greene, A Toutain, L Perrin, M Gérard, S Caillard, X Bei, R A Lewis, D Christmann, J Letsch, M Kribs, C Mutter, J Muller, C Stoetzel, M Fischbach, V Marion, N Katsanis, H Dollfus.   

Abstract

The ciliopathies are an expanding group of disorders caused by mutations in genes implicated in the biogenesis and function of primary cilia. Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is a model ciliopathy characterized by progressive retinal degeneration, obesity, polydactyly, cognitive impairment, kidney anomalies and hypogonadism. Mutations in SDCCAG8(NPHP10) were described recently in patients with nephronophthisis and retinal degeneration (Senior-Loken syndrome; SLS). Given the phenotypic and genetic overlap between known ciliopathy genes, we hypothesized that mutations in SDCCAG8 might also contribute alleles to more severe, multisystemic ciliopathies. We performed genetic and phenotypic analyses of 2 independent BBS cohorts. Subsequent to mutation screening, we made a detailed phenotypic analysis of 5 families mutated for SDCCAG8 (3 homozygous and 2 compound heterozygous mutations) and conducted statistical analyses across both cohorts to examine possible phenotype-genotype correlations with mutations at this locus. All patients with mutations in SDCCAG8 fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for BBS (retinal degeneration, obesity, cognitive defects, renal failure, hypogonadism). Interestingly, none of the patients with primary SDCCAG8 mutations had polydactyly, a frequent but not obligatory BBS feature. In contrast, the same patients displayed early-onset renal failure, obesity, as well as recurrent pulmonary and ENT infections. Comparison of the phenotypes of these families with our entire BBS cohort indicated that renal impairment and absent polydactyly correlated significantly with causal SDCCAG8 mutations. Thus, SDCCAG8 mutations are sufficient to cause BBS in 1-2% of our combined cohorts, and define this gene as the sixteenth BBS locus (BBS16). The absence of polydactyly and the concomitant, apparently fully penetrant association with early kidney failure represents the first significant genotype-phenotype correlation in BBS that potentially represents an indicator for phenotype-driven priority screening and informs specific patient management.

Entities:  

Year:  2011        PMID: 22190896      PMCID: PMC3214956          DOI: 10.1159/000331268

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Syndromol        ISSN: 1661-8769


  41 in total

1.  Retinal degeneration combined with obesity, diabetes mellitus and neurogenous deafness: a specific syndrome (not hitherto described) distinct from the Laurence-Moon-Bardet-Biedl syndrome: a clinical, endocrinological and genetic examination based on a large pedigree.

Authors:  C H ALSTROM; B HALLGREN; L B NILSSON; H ASANDER
Journal:  Acta Psychiatr Neurol Scand Suppl       Date:  1959

2.  Mutations in a member of the Ras superfamily of small GTP-binding proteins causes Bardet-Biedl syndrome.

Authors:  Yanli Fan; Muneer A Esmail; Stephen J Ansley; Oliver E Blacque; Keith Boroevich; Alison J Ross; Susan J Moore; Jose L Badano; Helen May-Simera; Deanna S Compton; Jane S Green; Richard Alan Lewis; Mieke M van Haelst; Patrick S Parfrey; David L Baillie; Philip L Beales; Nicholas Katsanis; William S Davidson; Michel R Leroux
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2004-08-15       Impact factor: 38.330

3.  Identification of 28 novel mutations in the Bardet-Biedl syndrome genes: the burden of private mutations in an extensively heterogeneous disease.

Authors:  Jean Muller; C Stoetzel; M C Vincent; C C Leitch; V Laurier; J M Danse; S Hellé; V Marion; V Bennouna-Greene; S Vicaire; A Megarbane; J Kaplan; V Drouin-Garraud; M Hamdani; S Sigaudy; C Francannet; J Roume; P Bitoun; A Goldenberg; N Philip; S Odent; J Green; M Cossée; E E Davis; N Katsanis; D Bonneau; A Verloes; O Poch; J L Mandel; H Dollfus
Journal:  Hum Genet       Date:  2010-02-23       Impact factor: 4.132

4.  Identification of a novel BBS gene (BBS12) highlights the major role of a vertebrate-specific branch of chaperonin-related proteins in Bardet-Biedl syndrome.

Authors:  Corinne Stoetzel; Jean Muller; Virginie Laurier; Erica E Davis; Norann A Zaghloul; Serge Vicaire; Cecile Jacquelin; Frederic Plewniak; Carmen C Leitch; Pierre Sarda; Christian Hamel; Thomy J L de Ravel; Richard Alan Lewis; Evelyne Friederich; Christelle Thibault; Jean-Marc Danse; Alain Verloes; Dominique Bonneau; Nicholas Katsanis; Olivier Poch; Jean-Louis Mandel; Helene Dollfus
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2006-11-15       Impact factor: 11.025

5.  Bardet-Biedl syndrome: a study of the renal and cardiovascular phenotypes in a French cohort.

Authors:  Olivier Imhoff; Vincent Marion; Corinne Stoetzel; Myriam Durand; Muriel Holder; Sabine Sigaudy; Pierre Sarda; Christian P Hamel; Christian Brandt; Hélène Dollfus; Bruno Moulin
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2010-09-28       Impact factor: 8.237

Review 6.  Mechanistic insights into Bardet-Biedl syndrome, a model ciliopathy.

Authors:  Norann A Zaghloul; Nicholas Katsanis
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2009-03-02       Impact factor: 14.808

7.  Identification of a Bardet-Biedl syndrome locus on chromosome 3 and evaluation of an efficient approach to homozygosity mapping.

Authors:  V C Sheffield; R Carmi; A Kwitek-Black; T Rokhlina; D Nishimura; G M Duyk; K Elbedour; S L Sunden; E M Stone
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  1994-08       Impact factor: 6.150

8.  Comparative genomics and gene expression analysis identifies BBS9, a new Bardet-Biedl syndrome gene.

Authors:  Darryl Y Nishimura; Ruth E Swiderski; Charles C Searby; Erik M Berg; Amanda L Ferguson; Raoul Hennekam; Saul Merin; Richard G Weleber; Leslie G Biesecker; Edwin M Stone; Val C Sheffield
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2005-10-26       Impact factor: 11.025

9.  The cardinal manifestations of Bardet-Biedl syndrome, a form of Laurence-Moon-Biedl syndrome.

Authors:  J S Green; P S Parfrey; J D Harnett; N R Farid; B C Cramer; G Johnson; O Heath; P J McManamon; E O'Leary; W Pryse-Phillips
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1989-10-12       Impact factor: 91.245

10.  TTC21B contributes both causal and modifying alleles across the ciliopathy spectrum.

Authors:  Erica E Davis; Qi Zhang; Qin Liu; Bill H Diplas; Lisa M Davey; Jane Hartley; Corinne Stoetzel; Katarzyna Szymanska; Gokul Ramaswami; Clare V Logan; Donna M Muzny; Alice C Young; David A Wheeler; Pedro Cruz; Margaret Morgan; Lora R Lewis; Praveen Cherukuri; Baishali Maskeri; Nancy F Hansen; James C Mullikin; Robert W Blakesley; Gerard G Bouffard; Gabor Gyapay; Susanne Rieger; Burkhard Tönshoff; Ilse Kern; Neveen A Soliman; Thomas J Neuhaus; Kathryn J Swoboda; Hulya Kayserili; Tomas E Gallagher; Richard A Lewis; Carsten Bergmann; Edgar A Otto; Sophie Saunier; Peter J Scambler; Philip L Beales; Joseph G Gleeson; Eamonn R Maher; Tania Attié-Bitach; Hélène Dollfus; Colin A Johnson; Eric D Green; Richard A Gibbs; Friedhelm Hildebrandt; Eric A Pierce; Nicholas Katsanis
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2011-01-23       Impact factor: 38.330

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  35 in total

Review 1.  Senior-Løken syndrome: a syndromic form of retinal dystrophy associated with nephronophthisis.

Authors:  C C Ronquillo; P S Bernstein; W Baehr
Journal:  Vision Res       Date:  2012-07-20       Impact factor: 1.886

2.  IFT27, encoding a small GTPase component of IFT particles, is mutated in a consanguineous family with Bardet-Biedl syndrome.

Authors:  Mohammed A Aldahmesh; Yuanyuan Li; Amal Alhashem; Shams Anazi; Hisham Alkuraya; Mais Hashem; Ali A Awaji; Sameera Sogaty; Abdullah Alkharashi; Saeed Alzahrani; Selwa A Al Hazzaa; Yong Xiong; Shanshan Kong; Zhaoxia Sun; Fowzan S Alkuraya
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2014-01-31       Impact factor: 6.150

Review 3.  Bardet-Biedl Syndrome.

Authors:  Evgeny N Suspitsin; Evgeny N Imyanitov
Journal:  Mol Syndromol       Date:  2016-04-15

Review 4.  Whole exome sequencing in a patient with uniparental disomy of chromosome 2 and a complex phenotype.

Authors:  H Carmichael; Y Shen; T T Nguyen; J N Hirschhorn; A Dauber
Journal:  Clin Genet       Date:  2012-12-20       Impact factor: 4.438

Review 5.  Gene-gene and gene-environment interactions in apolipoprotein L1 gene-associated nephropathy.

Authors:  Barry I Freedman; Karl Skorecki
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2014-06-05       Impact factor: 8.237

Review 6.  Update on the genetics of bardet-biedl syndrome.

Authors:  O M'hamdi; I Ouertani; H Chaabouni-Bouhamed
Journal:  Mol Syndromol       Date:  2013-12-20

Review 7.  Psychiatric behaviors associated with cytoskeletal defects in radial neuronal migration.

Authors:  Toshifumi Fukuda; Shigeru Yanagi
Journal:  Cell Mol Life Sci       Date:  2017-05-17       Impact factor: 9.261

Review 8.  The roles of evolutionarily conserved functional modules in cilia-related trafficking.

Authors:  Ching-Hwa Sung; Michel R Leroux
Journal:  Nat Cell Biol       Date:  2013-12       Impact factor: 28.824

9.  The genetics of childhood obesity and interaction with dietary macronutrients.

Authors:  William S Garver; Sara B Newman; Diana M Gonzales-Pacheco; Joseph J Castillo; David Jelinek; Randall A Heidenreich; Robert A Orlando
Journal:  Genes Nutr       Date:  2013-03-08       Impact factor: 5.523

10.  SDCCAG8 regulates pericentriolar material recruitment and neuronal migration in the developing cortex.

Authors:  Ryan Insolera; Wei Shao; Rannar Airik; Friedhelm Hildebrandt; Song-Hai Shi
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2014-07-31       Impact factor: 17.173

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