Genetic Variants in ARHGEF6 Cause Congenital Anomalies of the Kidneys and Urinary Tract in Humans, Mice, and Frogs

  • Verena Klämbt (Geteilte/r Erstautor/in)
  • Florian Buerger (Geteilte/r Erstautor/in)
  • Chunyan Wang
  • Thomas Naert
  • Karin Richter
  • Theresa Nauth
  • Anna-Carina Weiss
  • Tobias Sieckmann
  • Ethan Lai
  • Dervla Connaughton
  • Steve Seltzsam
  • Nina Mann
  • Amar Majmundar
  • Chen-Han Wu
  • Ana Onuchic-Whitford
  • Shirlee Shril
  • Sophia Schneider
  • Luca Schierbaum
  • Rufeng Dai
  • Mir Reza Bekheirnia
  • Marieke Joosten
  • Omer Shlomovitz
  • Asaf Vivante
  • Ehud Banne
  • Shrikant Mane
  • Richard P Lifton
  • Karin Kirschner
  • Andreas Kispert
  • Georg Rosenberger
  • Klaus-Dieter Fischer
  • Soeren Lienkamp
  • Mirjam Zegers
  • Friedhelm Hildebrandt

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

Background
About 40 disease genes have been described to date for isolated congenital anomalies of the kidneys and urinary tract (CAKUT), the most common cause of childhood chronic kidney disease. However, these genes account for only 20% of cases. ARHGEF6, a guanine nucleotide exchange factor that is implicated in such biologic processes as cell migration and focal adhesion, acts downstream of integrin linked kinase (ILK) and parvin proteins. A genetic variant of ILK that causes murine renal agenesis abrogates the interaction of ILK with a murine focal adhesion protein encoded by Parva, leading to CAKUT in mice with this variant.
Methods
To identify novel genes that, when mutated, result in CAKUT, we performed exome sequencing in an international cohort of 1265 families with CAKUT. We also assessed the effects in vitro of wild-type and mutant ARHGEF6 proteins, as well as the effects of Arhgef6 deficiency in mouse and frog models.
Results
We detected six different hemizygous variants in the gene ARHGEF6 (which is located on the X chromosome in humans) in eight individuals from six families with CAKUT. In kidney cells, overexpression of wild-type ARHGEF6-but not proband-derived mutant ARHGEF6- increased active levels of CDC42/RAC1, induced lamellipodia formation, and stimulated PARVAdependent cell spreading. ARHGEF6 mutant proteins showed loss of interaction with PARVA. Three-dimensional MDCK cell cultures expressing ARHGEF6 mutant proteins exhibited reduced lumen formation and polarity defects. Arhgef6 deficiency in mouse and frog models recapitulated features of human CAKUT.
Conclusions
Deleterious variants in ARHGEF6 may cause dysregulation of integrin-parvinRAC1/CDC42 signaling, thereby leading to X-linked CAKUT.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN1046-6673
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 01.02.2023
PubMed 36414417