| Literature DB >> 34355505 |
Georgia Pitsava1, Marcia L Feldkamp2, Nathan Pankratz3, John Lane3, Denise M Kay4, Kristin M Conway5, Gary M Shaw6, Jennita Reefhuis7, Mary M Jenkins7, Lynn M Almli7, Andrew F Olshan8, Faith Pangilinan9, Lawrence C Brody9, Robert J Sicko4, Charlotte A Hobbs10, Mike Bamshad11, Daniel McGoldrick12, Deborah A Nickerson12, Richard H Finnell13, James Mullikin14, Paul A Romitti5, James L Mills1.
Abstract
Bladder exstrophy (BE) is a rare, lower ventral midline defect with the bladder and part of the urethra exposed. The etiology of BE is unknown but thought to be influenced by genetic variation with more recent studies suggesting a role for rare variants. As such, we conducted paired-end exome sequencing in 26 child/mother/father trios. Three children had rare (allele frequency ≤ 0.0001 in several public databases) inherited variants in TSPAN4, one with a loss-of-function variant and two with missense variants. Two children had loss-of-function variants in TUBE1. Four children had rare missense or nonsense variants (one per child) in WNT3, CRKL, MYH9, or LZTR1, genes previously associated with BE. We detected 17 de novo missense variants in 13 children and three de novo loss-of-function variants (AKR1C2, PRRX1, PPM1D) in three children (one per child). We also detected rare compound heterozygous loss-of-function variants in PLCH2 and CLEC4M and rare inherited missense or loss-of-function variants in additional genes applying autosomal recessive (three genes) and X-linked recessive inheritance models (13 genes). Variants in two genes identified may implicate disruption in cell migration (TUBE1) and adhesion (TSPAN4) processes, mechanisms proposed for BE, and provide additional evidence for rare variants in the development of this defect.Entities:
Keywords: TSPAN4; TUBE1; birth defects; bladder exstrophy; genetics; ventral body wall closure
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34355505 PMCID: PMC8446314 DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.a.62439
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med Genet A ISSN: 1552-4825 Impact factor: 2.578