Back to Search Start Over

Genetic Drivers of Kidney Defects in the DiGeorge Syndrome.

Authors :
Lopez-Rivera E
Liu YP
Verbitsky M
Anderson BR
Capone VP
Otto EA
Yan Z
Mitrotti A
Martino J
Steers NJ
Fasel DA
Vukojevic K
Deng R
Racedo SE
Liu Q
Werth M
Westland R
Vivante A
Makar GS
Bodria M
Sampson MG
Gillies CE
Vega-Warner V
Maiorana M
Petrey DS
Honig B
Lozanovski VJ
Salomon R
Heidet L
Carpentier W
Gaillard D
Carrea A
Gesualdo L
Cusi D
Izzi C
Scolari F
van Wijk JA
Arapovic A
Saraga-Babic M
Saraga M
Kunac N
Samii A
McDonald-McGinn DM
Crowley TB
Zackai EH
Drozdz D
Miklaszewska M
Tkaczyk M
Sikora P
Szczepanska M
Mizerska-Wasiak M
Krzemien G
Szmigielska A
Zaniew M
Darlow JM
Puri P
Barton D
Casolari E
Furth SL
Warady BA
Gucev Z
Hakonarson H
Flogelova H
Tasic V
Latos-Bielenska A
Materna-Kiryluk A
Allegri L
Wong CS
Drummond IA
D'Agati V
Imamoto A
Barasch JM
Hildebrandt F
Kiryluk K
Lifton RP
Morrow BE
Jeanpierre C
Papaioannou VE
Ghiggeri GM
Gharavi AG
Katsanis N
Sanna-Cherchi S
Source :
The New England journal of medicine [N Engl J Med] 2017 Feb 23; Vol. 376 (8), pp. 742-754. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Jan 25.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Background: The DiGeorge syndrome, the most common of the microdeletion syndromes, affects multiple organs, including the heart, the nervous system, and the kidney. It is caused by deletions on chromosome 22q11.2; the genetic driver of the kidney defects is unknown.<br />Methods: We conducted a genomewide search for structural variants in two cohorts: 2080 patients with congenital kidney and urinary tract anomalies and 22,094 controls. We performed exome and targeted resequencing in samples obtained from 586 additional patients with congenital kidney anomalies. We also carried out functional studies using zebrafish and mice.<br />Results: We identified heterozygous deletions of 22q11.2 in 1.1% of the patients with congenital kidney anomalies and in 0.01% of population controls (odds ratio, 81.5; P=4.5×10 <superscript>-14</superscript> ). We localized the main drivers of renal disease in the DiGeorge syndrome to a 370-kb region containing nine genes. In zebrafish embryos, an induced loss of function in snap29, aifm3, and crkl resulted in renal defects; the loss of crkl alone was sufficient to induce defects. Five of 586 patients with congenital urinary anomalies had newly identified, heterozygous protein-altering variants, including a premature termination codon, in CRKL. The inactivation of Crkl in the mouse model induced developmental defects similar to those observed in patients with congenital urinary anomalies.<br />Conclusions: We identified a recurrent 370-kb deletion at the 22q11.2 locus as a driver of kidney defects in the DiGeorge syndrome and in sporadic congenital kidney and urinary tract anomalies. Of the nine genes at this locus, SNAP29, AIFM3, and CRKL appear to be critical to the phenotype, with haploinsufficiency of CRKL emerging as the main genetic driver. (Funded by the National Institutes of Health and others.).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1533-4406
Volume :
376
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The New England journal of medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28121514
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa1609009