Whole-Exome Sequencing Identifies Causative Mutations in Families with Congenital Anomalies of the Kidney and Urinary Tract

  • Amelie T van der Ven
  • Dervla M Connaughton
  • Hadas Ityel
  • Nina Mann
  • Makiko Nakayama
  • Jing Chen
  • Asaf Vivante
  • Daw-Yang Hwang
  • Julian Schulz
  • Daniela A Braun
  • Johanna Magdalena Schmidt
  • David Schapiro
  • Ronen Schneider
  • Jillian K Warejko
  • Ankana Daga
  • Amar J Majmundar
  • Weizhen Tan
  • Tilman Jobst-Schwan
  • Tobias Hermle
  • Eugen Widmeier
  • Shazia Ashraf
  • Ali Amar
  • Charlotte A Hoogstraaten
  • Hannah Hugo
  • Thomas M Kitzler
  • Franziska Kause
  • Caroline M Kolvenbach
  • Rufeng Dai
  • Leslie Spaneas
  • Kassaundra Amann
  • Deborah R Stein
  • Michelle A Baum
  • Michael J G Somers
  • Nancy M Rodig
  • Michael A Ferguson
  • Avram Z Traum
  • Ghaleb H Daouk
  • Radovan Bogdanović
  • Natasa Stajić
  • Neveen A Soliman
  • Jameela A Kari
  • Sherif El Desoky
  • Hanan M Fathy
  • Danko Milosevic
  • Muna Al-Saffar
  • Hazem S Awad
  • Loai A Eid
  • Aravind Selvin
  • Prabha Senguttuvan
  • Simone Sanna-Cherchi
  • Heidi L Rehm
  • Daniel G MacArthur
  • Monkol Lek
  • Kristen M Laricchia
  • Michael W Wilson
  • Shrikant M Mane
  • Richard P Lifton
  • Richard S Lee
  • Stuart B Bauer
  • Weining Lu
  • Heiko M Reutter
  • Velibor Tasic
  • Shirlee Shril
  • Friedhelm Hildebrandt

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) are the most prevalent cause of kidney disease in the first three decades of life. Previous gene panel studies showed monogenic causation in up to 12% of patients with CAKUT.

METHODS: We applied whole-exome sequencing to analyze the genotypes of individuals from 232 families with CAKUT, evaluating for mutations in single genes known to cause human CAKUT and genes known to cause CAKUT in mice. In consanguineous or multiplex families, we additionally performed a search for novel monogenic causes of CAKUT.

RESULTS: In 29 families (13%), we detected a causative mutation in a known gene for isolated or syndromic CAKUT that sufficiently explained the patient's CAKUT phenotype. In three families (1%), we detected a mutation in a gene reported to cause a phenocopy of CAKUT. In 15 of 155 families with isolated CAKUT, we detected deleterious mutations in syndromic CAKUT genes. Our additional search for novel monogenic causes of CAKUT in consanguineous and multiplex families revealed a potential single, novel monogenic CAKUT gene in 19 of 232 families (8%).

CONCLUSIONS: We identified monogenic mutations in a known human CAKUT gene or CAKUT phenocopy gene as the cause of disease in 14% of the CAKUT families in this study. Whole-exome sequencing provides an etiologic diagnosis in a high fraction of patients with CAKUT and will provide a new basis for the mechanistic understanding of CAKUT.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1046-6673
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 09.2018
Externally publishedYes
PubMed 30143558