| Literature DB >> 33854215 |
Judy Savige1, Helen Storey2, Elizabeth Watson3, Jens Michael Hertz4, Constantinos Deltas5, Alessandra Renieri6, Francesca Mari7, Pascale Hilbert7, Pavlina Plevova8, Peter Byers9, Agne Cerkauskaite10, Martin Gregory11, Rimante Cerkauskiene12, Danica Galesic Ljubanovic13, Francesca Becherucci14, Carmela Errichiello14, Laura Massella15, Valeria Aiello16, Rachel Lennon17, Louise Hopkinson17, Ania Koziell18, Adrian Lungu19, Hansjorg Martin Rothe20, Julia Hoefele21, Miriam Zacchia22, Tamara Nikuseva Martic23, Asheeta Gupta24, Albertien van Eerde25, Susie Gear26, Samuela Landini27, Viviana Palazzo28, Laith Al-Rabadi29, Kathleen Claes30, Anniek Corveleyn31, Evelien Van Hoof31, Micheel van Geel32, Maggie Williams33, Emma Ashton34, Hendica Belge35, Elisabeth Ars36, Agnieszka Bierzynska37, Concetta Gangemi38, Beata S Lipska-Ziętkiewicz39.
Abstract
The recent Chandos House meeting of the Alport Variant Collaborative extended the indications for screening for pathogenic variants in the COL4A5, COL4A3 and COL4A4 genes beyond the classical Alport phenotype (haematuria, renal failure; family history of haematuria or renal failure) to include persistent proteinuria, steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome, focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), familial IgA glomerulonephritis and end-stage kidney failure without an obvious cause. The meeting refined the ACMG criteria for variant assessment for the Alport genes (COL4A3-5). It identified 'mutational hotspots' (PM1) in the collagen IV α5, α3 and α4 chains including position 1 Glycine residues in the Gly-X-Y repeats in the intermediate collagenous domains; and Cysteine residues in the carboxy non-collagenous domain (PP3). It considered that 'well-established' functional assays (PS3, BS3) were still mainly research tools but sequencing and minigene assays were commonly used to confirm splicing variants. It was not possible to define the Minor Allele Frequency (MAF) threshold above which variants were considered Benign (BA1, BS1), because of the different modes of inheritances of Alport syndrome, and the occurrence of hypomorphic variants (often Glycine adjacent to a non-collagenous interruption) and local founder effects. Heterozygous COL4A3 and COL4A4 variants were common 'incidental' findings also present in normal reference databases. The recognition and interpretation of hypomorphic variants in the COL4A3-COL4A5 genes remains a challenge.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33854215 PMCID: PMC8384871 DOI: 10.1038/s41431-021-00858-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Hum Genet ISSN: 1018-4813 Impact factor: 4.246
Recommendations for genetic testing for Alport syndrome.
| Clinical spectrum | The typical clinical features of Alport syndrome are persistent haematuria, sometimes with progressive renal failure, together with a family history of haematuria or renal failure. Proteinuria, a hearing loss or a lamellated or thinned glomerular basement membrane may be present. Other phenotypes associated with pathogenic variants in the |
| Genetic testing | The most accurate test for the detection of a causative pathogenic variant in the |
Standards and guidelines for the interpretation of sequence variants in COL4A3–COL4A5 in Alport syndrome (modified ACMG/AMP criteria).
| PVS1 | Null variants (nonsense, frameshift, canonical ±1 or 2 splice site) are pathogenic for Alport syndrome. |
| PS3 | Well-established (robust and reproducible) in vitro or in vivo functional studies supportive of a damaging effect on the gene or gene product. |
| PS4 | The prevalence of the variant in affected individuals is increased compared with controls. |
| PM1 | Located in a mutational hotspots or critical and well-established domains without benign variation. |
| PM2 | Absent from controls (or at extremely low frequency if recessive) in gnomAD, ESP, 1000 Genomes or ExAC. |
| PM5 | Novel missense change at an amino acid residue where a different missense change determined to be pathogenic has been seen before. |
| PP2 | Missense variant in a gene that has a low rate of benign missense variation and where missense variants are a common mechanism of disease. |
| PP4 | Patients’ phenotype or family history is highly specific for a disease with a single genetic aetiology. |
| BA1 | The allele frequency of a variant is above 5% in normal variant databases. |
| BP1 | Missense variant in a gene for which primarily truncating variants are known to cause disease. |
| BP2 | Observed in trans with a pathogenic variant for a fully penetrant domain gene/disorder; or observed in cis with a pathogenic variant in any inheritance pattern. |
| BP3 | In-frame deletions/insertions in a repetitive region without a known function. |
| BP5 | Variant found in a case with an alternate molecular basis of disease. |
Location of missense variants in the collagen IV α5 chain in different variant databases.
| Number of missense variants | Number of amino acids (% of total) | ClinVar | ARUP | HGMD | LOVD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | 1691 (100%) | 487 | 347 | 430 | 639 |
| Amino NC domain | 41 (2%) | 4 (1%) | 0 | 7 (2%) ( | 1 (0%) ( |
| Intermediate collagenous domain | 1418 (84%) | 427 (88%) | 303 (87%) | 368 (86%) | 565 (88%) ( |
| Carboxy NC domain | 231 (14%) | 56 (11%) | 44 (13%) | 55 (13%) | 73 (11%) ( |
p values indicate the difference in the number of missense variants found in the region according to this database compared with the expected number based on the number of amino acids in this domain using Fisher’s exact test.
Comparison of variant databases for COL4A5.
| ClinVar | ARUP | HGMD | LOVD | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Website | ||||
| Total number of variants | 1260 | 807 | 905 (1169 for subscribers) | 1595 |
| Curated | Submitters’ assessments recorded but a star system depending on number of reports and expert panel assessment | Submitters’ assessments recorded | Yes | Submitters’ assessments recorded |
| Clinical details available | Includes publications with clinical details | Includes publications | Includes publications | Clinical details from submitters plus publications |
| Includes benign or likely benign variants | Yes ( | Yes ( | Assessments only available to subscribers | Yes ( |
| Cost | Freely available online | Freely available online | Publicly-available version up to 3 years previously; otherwise professional version | Freely available online |
The databases were accessed in April-May 2020.
Fig. 1Collagen IV α5 chain.
a Schematic of collagen IV α5 chain with amino and carboxy non-collagenous domains, and intermediate collagenous sequence with Gly-Xaa-Yaa repeats and 23 non-collagenous interruptions. Gly substitutions adjacent to the interruptions are often hypomorphic with a milder clinical phenotype. b Clustal sequence demonstrating that the collagen IV α5 chain is highly conserved between different species both in the collagenous and in the carboxy non-collagenous domains. This sequence also includes a non-collagenous interruption as well as the carboxy terminus (both in boxes). c Clustal sequence demonstrating that the human collagen IV α5, α3 and α4 chains are also conserved.
Non-collagenous domains and interruptions in the collagen IV α5 chain [44].
| Non-collagenous interruption (residues) | Residues | Residue number of Gly |
|---|---|---|
| Amino -NC domain (1–41) | MKL…DCS | 5, 11, 21, 31, 35 |
| I (160–167) | SIIMSSLP | |
| II (220–223) | LNFQ | |
| III (243–257) | QISEQKRPIDVEFQK | |
| IV (282|283) | – | |
| V (344–355) | LVIPRPGTGITI | 350, 352 |
| VI (390–393) | AAVM | |
| VII (416–419) | ISIP | |
| VIII (442–453) | PHIPPSDEICEP | |
| IX (479–487) | DICFNCIGT | 486 |
| X (549–554) | DILTFP | |
| XI (595–599) | GITFK | 595 |
| XII (625) | F | |
| XIII (657–662) | QTITQP | |
| XIV (706) | I | |
| XV (753–756) | FALP | |
| XVI (818) | I | |
| XVII (853–856) | LDVP | |
| XVIII (954–960) | PMDPNLL | |
| XIX (1070–1073) | ISSI | |
| XX (1189) | F | |
| XXI (1245–8) | PALE | |
| XXII (1373–78) | QSIIIK | |
| Carboxy -NC domain (1461–1691) | TSS…KRT | 1467, 1485, 1492, 1500, 1506, 1510, 1513, 1560, 1595, 1602, 1612, 1615, 1617, 1624, 1650, 1642, 1675 |
This table is from the original report. Since then the Ref Seq has been changed by the addition of 6 amino acids 1264–1264: G>GPTGFQG in the kidney transcript, which alters the numbering.
Interruption IV is formed from two collagenous regions directly adjacent to one another. This results in the Gly-Xaa-Yaa-Gly-Gly-Xaa-Yaa-Gly sequence and a structural kink.
Non-collagenous domains and interruptions in the collagen IV α4 chain [57].
| Interruptions (residues) | Residues | Residue number of Gly |
|---|---|---|
| Amino NC (1–61) | MWS…PEK | 22, 38, 40, 45, 48, 49 |
| I (176–183) | VFILGAVK | 180 |
| II (235–236) | GV | 235 |
| III (258–269) | LLVEPPDFCLYK | |
| IV (294–295) | GI | 294 |
| V (359–366) | VTPPLPLK | |
| VI (400–401) | CA | |
| VII (429–432) | DSAP | |
| VIII (457–462) | VIYCSV | |
| IX (493–496) | ACEP | |
| X (560–565) | VVSRVK | |
| XI (605–609) | EDATP | |
| XII (631–632) | GL | 631 |
| XIII (666–673) | ESCNVTYP | |
| XIV (716–718) | EIP | |
| XV (740–741) | PV | |
| XVI (763–764) | AF | |
| XVII (828–830) | CER | |
| XVIII (966–971) | AIISQK | |
| XIX (1014) | R | |
| XX (1078–1081) | ASHF | |
| XXI (1196–1197) | DV | |
| XXII (1222–1223) | PP | |
| XXIII (1251–1257) | PKDIPDP | |
| XXIV (1285–1288) | DLLR | |
| XXV (1370–1379) | ADVDDCPRIP | |
| XXVI (1404–1405) | GP | 1404 |
| Carboxy NC (1460–1690) | PGY…KYS | 1461, 1464, 1465, 1483, 1490, 1498, 1508, 1511, 1598, 1606, 1608, 1611, 1612, 1613, 1620, 1636, 1639 |
Non-collagenous domains and interruptions in the collagen IV α3 chain [56].
| Interruptions (residues) | Residues | Residue number of Gly |
|---|---|---|
| Amino NC (1–42) | MSA…FCD | 30, 37 |
| I (160–170) | AKEEDIELDAK | |
| II (222–223) | VI | |
| III (245–258) | IVTLTGPDNRTDLK | 250 |
| IV (283–287) | YGSEK | 284 |
| V (345–353) | EYYDTYQEK | |
| VI (387–388) | RP | |
| VII (413–414) | AM | |
| VIII (442–445) | VFRK | |
| IX (476–483) | CTQCPYIP | |
| X (544–547) | LQPE | |
| XI (587–589) | ALS | |
| XII (617–618) | GY | 617 |
| XIII (649–655) | SVSTPVP | |
| XIV (698–699) | GI | 698 |
| XV (745–749) | AVAMP | |
| XVI (810–811) | IE | |
| XVII (848–849) | RS | |
| XVIII (946–951) | EISHVI | |
| XIX (1060–1064) | EGTRP | 1061 |
| XX (1176–1179) | RAPP | |
| XXI (1234–1235) | IP | |
| XXII (1263–1264) | VI | |
| XXIII (1352–1357) | KIISLP | |
| Carboxy NC (1439–1670) | ATW…KRH | 1445, 1463, 1470, 1478, 1484, 1488, 1491, 1538, 1553, 1573, 1580, 1590, 1593, 1595, 1602, 1618, 1620, 1653 |