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Distinct genetic architectures for syndromic and nonsyndromic congenital heart defects identified by exome sequencing

Authors :
Sifrim, Alejandro
Hitz, Marc-Phillip
Wilsdon, Anna
Breckpot, Jeroen
Al Turki, Saeed H.
Thienpont, Bernard
McRae, Jeremy
Fitzgerald, Tomas W
Singh, Tarjinder
Swaminathan, Ganesh Jawahar
Prigmore, Elena
Rajan, Diana
Abdul-Khaliq, Hashim
Banka, Siddharth
Bauer, Ulrike M. M.
Bentham, Jamie
Berger, Felix
Bhattacharya, Shoumo
Bu'Lock, Frances
Canham, Natalie
Colgiu, Irina-Gabriela
Cosgrove, Catherine
Cox, Helen
Daehnert, Ingo
Daly, Allan
Danesh, John
Fryer, Alan
Gewillig, Marc
Hobson, Emma
Hoff, Kirstin
Homfray, Tessa
Kahlert, Anne-Karin
Ketley, Ami
Kramer, Hans-Heiner
Lachlan, Katherine
Lampe, Anne Katrin
Louw, Jacoba J.
Manickara, Ashok Kumar
Manase, Dorin
McCarthy, Karen P.
Metcalfe, Kay
Moore, Carmel
Newbury-Ecob, Ruth
Omer, Seham Osman
Ouwehand, Willem H.
Park, Soo-Mi
Parker, Michael J.
Pickardt, Thomas
Pollard, Martin O.
Robert, Leema
Roberts, David J.
Sambrook, Jennifer
Setchfield, Kerry
Stiller, Brigitte
Thornborough, Chris
Toka, Okan
Watkins, Hugh
Williams, Denise
Wright, Michael
Mital, Seema
Daubeney, Piers E. F.
Keavney, Bernard
Goodship, Judith
Abu-Sulaiman, Riyadh Mahdi
Klaassen, Sabine
Wright, Caroline F.
Firth, Helen V.
Barrett, Jeffrey C.
Devriendt, Koenraad
FitzPatrick, David R.
Brook, J. David
Hurles, Matthew
Source :
Sifrim, A., M. Hitz, A. Wilsdon, J. Breckpot, S. H. Al Turki, B. Thienpont, J. McRae, et al. 2018. “Distinct genetic architectures for syndromic and nonsyndromic congenital heart defects identified by exome sequencing.” Nature genetics 48 (9): 1060-1065. doi:10.1038/ng.3627. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ng.3627.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Congenital Heart Defects (CHD) have a neonatal incidence of 0.8-1%1,2. Despite abundant examples of monogenic CHD in humans and mice, CHD has a low absolute sibling recurrence risk (~2.7%)3, suggesting a considerable role for de novo mutations (DNM), and/or incomplete penetrance4,5. De novo protein-truncating variants (PTVs) have been shown to be enriched among the 10% of ‘syndromic’ patients with extra-cardiac manifestations6,7. We exome sequenced 1,891 probands, including both syndromic (S-CHD, n=610) and non-syndromic cases (NS-CHD, n=1,281). In S-CHD, we confirmed a significant enrichment of de novo PTVs, but not inherited PTVs, in known CHD-associated genes, consistent with recent findings8. Conversely, in NS-CHD we observed significant enrichment of PTVs inherited from unaffected parents in CHD-associated genes. We identified three novel genome-wide significant S-CHD disorders caused by DNMs in CHD4, CDK13 and PRKD1. Our study reveals distinct genetic architectures underlying the low sibling recurrence risk in S-CHD and NS-CHD.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
Digital Access to Scholarship at Harvard (DASH)
Journal :
Sifrim, A., M. Hitz, A. Wilsdon, J. Breckpot, S. H. Al Turki, B. Thienpont, J. McRae, et al. 2018. “Distinct genetic architectures for syndromic and nonsyndromic congenital heart defects identified by exome sequencing.” Nature genetics 48 (9): 1060-1065. doi:10.1038/ng.3627. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ng.3627.
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edshld.1.37298210
Document Type :
Journal Article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ng.3627