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Rare and de novo variants in 827 congenital diaphragmatic hernia probands implicate LONP1 as candidate risk gene

Authors :
Julie Khlevner
Julia Wynn
Frances A. High
Usha Krishnan
Aliva De
Xin Sun
Jane B. Lyon
Lan Yu
David J. McCulley
Howard Needelman
Gudrun Aspelund
Yufeng Shen
Timothy M. Crombleholme
Elizabeth A. Fialkowski
Kenneth S. Azarow
Rebecca Hernan
Vincent Duron
Le Xu
Christiana Farkouh-Karoleski
Douglas A. Potoka
Foong-Yen Lim
Xueya Zhou
Brad W. Warner
Dai Chung
Mahmoud Elfiky
Jill M. Zalieckas
Samuel Z. Soffer
David T. Schindel
Melissa E. Danko
Wendy K. Chung
Badri N. Vardarajan
Patricia K. Donahoe
Przemyslaw Kosinski
Amy J. Wagner
Lu Qiao
Robert A. Cusick
George B. Mychaliska
Annette Zygmunt
Source :
Am J Hum Genet, American journal of human genetics, vol 108, iss 10
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) is a severe congenital anomaly that is often accompanied by other anomalies. Although the role of genetics in the pathogenesis of CDH has been established, only a small number of disease-associated genes have been identified. To further investigate the genetics of CDH, we analyzed de novo coding variants in 827 proband-parent trios and confirmed an overall significant enrichment of damaging de novo variants, especially in constrained genes. We identified LONP1 (lon peptidase 1, mitochondrial) and ALYREF (Aly/REF export factor) as candidate CDH-associated genes on the basis of de novo variants at a false discovery rate below 0.05. We also performed ultra-rare variant association analyses in 748 affected individuals and 11,220 ancestry-matched population control individuals and identified LONP1 as a risk gene contributing to CDH through both de novo and ultra-rare inherited largely heterozygous variants clustered in the core of the domains and segregating with CDH in affected familial individuals. Approximately 3% of our CDH cohort who are heterozygous with ultra-rare predicted damaging variants in LONP1 have a range of clinical phenotypes, including other anomalies in some individuals and higher mortality and requirement for extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. Mice with lung epithelium-specific deletion of Lonp1 die immediately after birth, most likely because of the observed severe reduction of lung growth, a known contributor to the high mortality in humans. Our findings of both de novo and inherited rare variants in the same gene may have implications in the design and analysis for other genetic studies of congenital anomalies.

Details

ISSN :
15376605
Volume :
108
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of human genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cdf382c0e07d70e5f647e45b2f6b1230