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Characterizing the morbid genome of ciliopathies.

Authors :
Shaheen R
Szymanska K
Basu B
Patel N
Ewida N
Faqeih E
Al Hashem A
Derar N
Alsharif H
Aldahmesh MA
Alazami AM
Hashem M
Ibrahim N
Abdulwahab FM
Sonbul R
Alkuraya H
Alnemer M
Al Tala S
Al-Husain M
Morsy H
Seidahmed MZ
Meriki N
Al-Owain M
AlShahwan S
Tabarki B
Salih MA
Faquih T
El-Kalioby M
Ueffing M
Boldt K
Logan CV
Parry DA
Al Tassan N
Monies D
Megarbane A
Abouelhoda M
Halees A
Johnson CA
Alkuraya FS
Source :
Genome biology [Genome Biol] 2016 Nov 28; Vol. 17 (1), pp. 242. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Nov 28.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Background: Ciliopathies are clinically diverse disorders of the primary cilium. Remarkable progress has been made in understanding the molecular basis of these genetically heterogeneous conditions; however, our knowledge of their morbid genome, pleiotropy, and variable expressivity remains incomplete.<br />Results: We applied genomic approaches on a large patient cohort of 371 affected individuals from 265 families, with phenotypes that span the entire ciliopathy spectrum. Likely causal mutations in previously described ciliopathy genes were identified in 85% (225/265) of the families, adding 32 novel alleles. Consistent with a fully penetrant model for these genes, we found no significant difference in their "mutation load" beyond the causal variants between our ciliopathy cohort and a control non-ciliopathy cohort. Genomic analysis of our cohort further identified mutations in a novel morbid gene TXNDC15, encoding a thiol isomerase, based on independent loss of function mutations in individuals with a consistent ciliopathy phenotype (Meckel-Gruber syndrome) and a functional effect of its deficiency on ciliary signaling. Our study also highlighted seven novel candidate genes (TRAPPC3, EXOC3L2, FAM98C, C17orf61, LRRCC1, NEK4, and CELSR2) some of which have established links to ciliogenesis. Finally, we show that the morbid genome of ciliopathies encompasses many founder mutations, the combined carrier frequency of which accounts for a high disease burden in the study population.<br />Conclusions: Our study increases our understanding of the morbid genome of ciliopathies. We also provide the strongest evidence, to date, in support of the classical Mendelian inheritance of Bardet-Biedl syndrome and other ciliopathies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1474-760X
Volume :
17
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Genome biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
27894351
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-016-1099-5