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Whole Exome Sequencing Reveals a Monogenic Cause of Disease in ≈43% of 35 Families With Midaortic Syndrome

Authors :
Friedhelm Hildebrandt
Avram Z. Traum
James E. Lock
Jillian K. Warejko
Weizhen Tan
Asaf Vivante
Gulraiz Chaudry
Deborah R. Stein
Leslie B. Smoot
Shrikant M. Mane
Edward R. Smith
Ankana Daga
Khashayar Vakili
Kassaundra Amann
Shirlee Shril
Richard P. Lifton
Ghaleb Daouk
Michael J. Rivkin
Michael J. Somers
Daniela A. Braun
Michelle A. Baum
Michael N. Singh
Michael A. J. Ferguson
Nancy Rodig
Heung Bae Kim
Diego Porras
Jennifer A. Lawson
Markus Schueler
Source :
Hypertension. 71:691-699
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2018.

Abstract

Midaortic syndrome (MAS) is a rare cause of severe childhood hypertension characterized by narrowing of the abdominal aorta in children and is associated with extensive vascular disease. It may occur as part of a genetic syndrome, such as neurofibromatosis, or as consequence of a pathological inflammatory disease. However, most cases are considered idiopathic. We hypothesized that in a high percentage of these patients, a monogenic cause of disease may be detected by evaluating whole exome sequencing data for mutations in 1 of 38 candidate genes previously described to cause vasculopathy. We studied a cohort of 36 individuals from 35 different families with MAS by exome sequencing. In 15 of 35 families (42.9%), we detected likely causal dominant mutations. In 15 of 35 (42.9%) families with MAS, whole exome sequencing revealed a mutation in one of the genes previously associated with vascular disease ( NF1 , JAG1 , ELN , GATA6 , and RNF213 ). Ten of the 15 mutations have not previously been reported. This is the first report of ELN , RNF213 , or GATA6 mutations in individuals with MAS. Mutations were detected in NF1 (6/15 families), JAG1 (4/15 families), ELN (3/15 families), and one family each for GATA6 and RNF213 . Eight individuals had syndromic disease and 7 individuals had isolated MAS. Whole exome sequencing can provide conclusive molecular genetic diagnosis in a high fraction of individuals with syndromic or isolated MAS. Establishing an etiologic diagnosis may reveal genotype/phenotype correlations for MAS in the future and should, therefore, be performed routinely in MAS.

Details

ISSN :
15244563 and 0194911X
Volume :
71
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Hypertension
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....718316360ca1834942ef78649d85e72e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/hypertensionaha.117.10296