Prioritization of Monogenic Congenital Anomalies of the Kidney and Urinary Tract Candidate Genes with Existing Single-Cell Transcriptomics Data of the Human Fetal Kidney

  • Luca M Schierbaum
  • Sophia Schneider
  • Florian Buerger
  • Abdul Aziz Halawi
  • Steve Seltzsam
  • Chunyan Wang
  • Bixia Zheng
  • Chen-Han Wilfried Wu
  • Rufeng Dai
  • Dervla M Connaughton
  • Daanya Salmanullah
  • Makiko Nakayama
  • Nina Mann
  • Shirlee Shril
  • Friedhelm Hildebrandt

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) are the most common cause of chronic kidney disease in the first 3 decades of life. Over 40 genes have been identified as causative for isolated human CAKUT. However, many genes remain unknown, and the prioritization of potential CAKUT candidate genes is challenging. To develop an independent approach to prioritize CAKUT candidate genes, we hypothesized that monogenic CAKUT genes are most likely co-expressed along a temporal axis during kidney development and that genes with coinciding high expression may represent strong novel CAKUT candidate genes.

METHODS: We analyzed single-cell mRNA (sc-mRNA) transcriptomics data of human fetal kidney for temporal sc-mRNA co-expression of 40 known CAKUT genes. A maximum of high expression in consecutive timepoints of kidney development was found for four of the 40 genes (EYA1, SIX1, SIX2, and ITGA8) in nephron progenitor cells a, b, c, d (NPCa-d). We concluded that NPCa-d are relevant for CAKUT pathogenesis and intersected two lists of CAKUT candidate genes resulting from unbiased whole-exome sequencing (WES) with the 100 highest expressed genes in NPCa-d.

RESULTS: Intersection of the 100 highest expressed genes in NPCa-d with WES-derived CAKUT candidate genes identified an overlap with the candidate genes KIF19, TRIM36, USP35, CHTF18, in each of which a biallelic variant was detected in different families with CAKUT.

CONCLUSION: Sc-mRNA expression data of human fetal kidney can be utilized to prioritize WES-derived CAKUT candidate genes. KIF19, TRIM36, USP35, and CHTF18 may represent strong novel candidate genes for CAKUT.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN1660-8151
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 2023
Extern publiziertJa

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© 2023 S. Karger AG, Basel.

PubMed 37499630