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Integrative analysis of genomic variants reveals new associations of candidate haploinsufficient genes with congenital heart disease

Authors :
Gregor Dombrowsky
Marc-Phillip Hitz
Hashim Abdul-Khaliq
Felix Berger
Piers E.F. Daubeney
Ingo Daehnert
Lars Allan Larsen
Michael E. Mitchell
Bernard Keavney
Mads Bak
Dianna M. Milewicz
Sven Dittrich
Philipp Hofmann
Kirstin Hoff
Woody D Benson
Hans-Heiner Kramer
Sabine Klaassen
Karl Hackmann
Siddharth K. Prakash
Brigitte Stiller
Aoy Tomita-Mitchell
Florian Wuennemann
Inga Vater
Christian R. Marshall
Anna Wilsdon
Alejandro Sifrim
Reiner Siebert
Thomas Pickardt
Scott Lemaire
Koenraad Devriendt
Joe Coselli
Almuth Caliebe
Enrique Audain
Karl Stamm
Kahlert Anne-Karin
Tomas W Fitzgerald
Jill A. Rosenfeld
Matthew E. Hurles
Alex V. Postma
Candice K. Silversides
Yasset Perez-Riverol
Jeroen Breckpot
John W. Belmont
U.M.M. Bauer
Gregor Andelfinger
Anne S. Bassett
Vidu Garg
Alexandre F.R. Stewart
David Brook
Bernard Thienpont
Jose M. G. Izarzugaza
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 2020.

Abstract

Congenital Heart Disease (CHD) affects approximately 7-9 children per 1000 live births. Numerous genetic studies have established a role for rare genomic variants at the copy number variation (CNV) and single nucleotide variant level. In particular, the role of de novo mutations (DNM) has been highlighted in syndromic and non-syndromic CHD. To identify novel haploinsufficient CHD disease genes we performed an integrative analysis of CNVs and DNMs identified in probands with CHD including cases with sporadic thoracic aortic aneurysm (TAA). We assembled CNV data from 7,958 cases and 14,082 controls and performed a gene-wise analysis of the burden of rare genomic deletions in cases versus controls. In addition, we performed mutation rate testing for DNMs identified in 2,489 parent-offspring trios. Our combined analysis revealed 21 genes which were significantly affected by rare genomic deletions and/or constrained non-synonymous de novo mutations in probands. Fourteen of these genes have previously been associated with CHD while the remaining genes (FEZ1, MYO16, ARID1B, NALCN, WAC, KDM5B and WHSC1) have only been associated in singletons and small cases series, or show new associations with CHD. In addition, a systems level analysis revealed shared contribution of CNV deletions and DNMs in CHD probands, affecting protein-protein interaction networks involved in Notch signaling pathway, heart morphogenesis, DNA repair and cilia/centrosome function. Taken together, this approach highlights the importance of re-analyzing existing datasets to strengthen disease association and identify novel disease genes.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....efcf7c3ec6761a9db19fadfeb46c6811