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Classic bladder exstrophy : Frequent 22q11.21 duplications and definition of a 414 kb phenocritical region

Authors :
Draaken, Markus
Baudisch, Friederike
Timmermann, Bernd
Kuhl, Heiner
Kerick, Martin
Proske, Judith
Wittler, Lars
Pennimpede, Tracie
Ebert, Anne-Karoline
Rösch, Wolfgang
Stein, Raimund
Bartels, Enrika
von Lowtzow, Catharina
Boemers, Thomas M
Herms, Stefan
Gearhart, John P
Lakshmanan, Yegappan
Kockum, Christina Clementsson
Holmdahl, Gundela
Läckgren, Göran
Nordenskjöld, Agnetha
Boyadjiev, Simeon A
Herrmann, Bernhard G
Nöthen, Markus M
Ludwig, Michael
Reutter, Heiko
Draaken, Markus
Baudisch, Friederike
Timmermann, Bernd
Kuhl, Heiner
Kerick, Martin
Proske, Judith
Wittler, Lars
Pennimpede, Tracie
Ebert, Anne-Karoline
Rösch, Wolfgang
Stein, Raimund
Bartels, Enrika
von Lowtzow, Catharina
Boemers, Thomas M
Herms, Stefan
Gearhart, John P
Lakshmanan, Yegappan
Kockum, Christina Clementsson
Holmdahl, Gundela
Läckgren, Göran
Nordenskjöld, Agnetha
Boyadjiev, Simeon A
Herrmann, Bernhard G
Nöthen, Markus M
Ludwig, Michael
Reutter, Heiko
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Classic bladder exstrophy (CBE) is the most common form of the bladder exstrophy and epispadias complex. Previously, we and others have identified four patients with a duplication of 22q11.21 among a total of 96 unrelated CBE patients. METHODS: Here, we investigated whether this chromosomal aberration was commonly associated with CBE/bladder exstrophy and epispadias complex in an extended case-control sample. Multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification and microarray-based analysis were used to identify 22q11.21 duplications in 244 unrelated bladder exstrophy and epispadias complex patients (including 217 CBE patients) and 665 healthy controls. RESULTS: New duplications of variable size were identified in four CBE patients and one control. Pooling of our previous and present data (eight duplications in 313 CBE patients) yielded a combined odds ratio of 31.86 (95% confidence interval, 4.24-1407.97). Array-based sequence capture and high-throughput targeted re-sequencing established that all breakpoints resided within the low-copy repeats 22A to 22D. Comparison of the eight duplications revealed a 414 kb phenocritical region harboring 12 validated RefSeq genes. Characterization of these 12 candidate genes through whole-mount in situ hybridization of mouse embryos at embryonic day 9.5 suggested that CRKL, THAP7, and LZTR1 are CBE candidate genes. CONCLUSION: Our data suggest that duplication of 22q11.21 increases CBE risk and implicate a phenocritical region in disease formation.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1235133940
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002.bdra.23249