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Exome sequencing reveals a high genetic heterogeneity on familial Hirschsprung disease

Authors :
Raquel M. Fernández
Ana Torroglosa
Paul K.H. Tam
Pak C. Sham
Hongsheng Gui
Marta Bleda
Berta Luzón-Toro
Guillermo Antiñolo
Joaquín Dopazo
Maria-Mercè Garcia-Barceló
Laura Espino-Paisán
Salud Borrego
María Valle Enguix-Riego
Macarena Ruiz-Ferrer
Clara S. Tang
Stacey S. Cherny
Source :
Scientific Reports, r-CIPF: Repositorio Institucional Producción Científica del Centro de Investigación Principe Felipe (CIPF), Centro de Investigación Principe Felipe (CIPF), r-CIPF. Repositorio Institucional Producción Científica del Centro de Investigación Principe Felipe (CIPF), instname
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2015.

Abstract

Hirschsprung disease (HSCR; OMIM 142623) is a developmental disorder characterized by aganglionosis along variable lengths of the distal gastrointestinal tract, which results in intestinal obstruction. Interactions among known HSCR genes and/or unknown disease susceptibility loci lead to variable severity of phenotype. Neither linkage nor genome-wide association studies have efficiently contributed to completely dissect the genetic pathways underlying this complex genetic disorder. We have performed whole exome sequencing of 16 HSCR patients from 8 unrelated families with SOLID platform. Variants shared by affected relatives were validated by Sanger sequencing. We searched for genes recurrently mutated across families. Only variations in the FAT3 gene were significantly enriched in five families. Within-family analysis identified compound heterozygotes for AHNAK and several genes (N = 23) with heterozygous variants that co-segregated with the phenotype. Network and pathway analyses facilitated the discovery of polygenic inheritance involving FAT3, HSCR known genes and their gene partners. Altogether, our approach has facilitated the detection of more than one damaging variant in biologically plausible genes that could jointly contribute to the phenotype. Our data may contribute to the understanding of the complex interactions that occur during enteric nervous system development and the etiopathology of familial HSCR.

Details

ISSN :
20452322
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific Reports, r-CIPF: Repositorio Institucional Producción Científica del Centro de Investigación Principe Felipe (CIPF), Centro de Investigación Principe Felipe (CIPF), r-CIPF. Repositorio Institucional Producción Científica del Centro de Investigación Principe Felipe (CIPF), instname
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a33b80bcb9030464313aed5ead648274