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American Journal of Human Genetics | 2005

Dent Disease with mutations in OCRL1.

Richard R. Hoopes; Antony E. Shrimpton; Stephen J. Knohl; Paul Hueber; Bernd Hoppe; János Mátyus; Ari M. Simckes; Velibor Tasic; Burkhard Toenshoff; Sharon F. Suchy; Robert L. Nussbaum; Steven J. Scheinman

Dent disease is an X-linked renal proximal tubulopathy associated with mutations in the chloride channel gene CLCN5. Lowe syndrome, a multisystem disease characterized by renal tubulopathy, congenital cataracts, and mental retardation, is associated with mutations in the gene OCRL1, which encodes a phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP(2)) 5-phosphatase. Genetic heterogeneity has been suspected in Dent disease, but no other gene for Dent disease has been reported. We studied male probands in 13 families, all of whom met strict criteria for Dent disease but lacked mutations in CLCN5. Linkage analysis in the one large family localized the gene to a candidate region at Xq25-Xq27.1. Sequencing of candidate genes revealed a mutation in the OCRL1 gene. Of the 13 families studied, OCRL1 mutations were found in 5. PIP(2) 5-phosphatase activity was markedly reduced in skin fibroblasts cultured from the probands of these five families, and protein expression, measured by western blotting, was reduced or absent. Slit-lamp examinations performed in childhood or adulthood for all five probands showed normal results. Unlike patients with typical Lowe syndrome, none of these patients had metabolic acidosis. Three of the five probands had mild mental retardation, whereas two had no developmental delay or behavioral disturbance. These findings demonstrate that mutations in OCRL1 can occur with the isolated renal phenotype of Dent disease in patients lacking the cataracts, renal tubular acidosis, and neurological abnormalities that are characteristic of Lowe syndrome. This observation confirms genetic heterogeneity in Dent disease and demonstrates more-extensive phenotypic heterogeneity in Lowe syndrome than was previously appreciated. It establishes that the diagnostic criteria for disorders resulting from mutations in the Lowe syndrome gene OCRL1 need to be revised.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2014

Clinical delineation and natural history of the PIK3CA -related overgrowth spectrum

Kim M. Keppler-Noreuil; Julie C. Sapp; Marjorie J. Lindhurst; Victoria Parker; Cathy Blumhorst; Thomas N. Darling; Laura L. Tosi; Susan M. Huson; Richard W Whitehouse; Eveliina Jakkula; Ian M. Grant; Meena Balasubramanian; Kate Chandler; Jamie L. Fraser; Zoran Gucev; Yanick J. Crow; Leslie Manace Brennan; Robin D. Clark; Elizabeth A. Sellars; Loren D.M. Pena; Vidya Krishnamurty; Andrew Y Shuen; Nancy Braverman; Michael L. Cunningham; V. Reid Sutton; Velibor Tasic; John M. Graham; Joseph Geer; Alex Henderson; Robert K. Semple

Somatic mutations in the phosphatidylinositol/AKT/mTOR pathway cause segmental overgrowth disorders. Diagnostic descriptors associated with PIK3CA mutations include fibroadipose overgrowth (FAO), Hemihyperplasia multiple Lipomatosis (HHML), Congenital Lipomatous Overgrowth, Vascular malformations, Epidermal nevi, Scoliosis/skeletal and spinal (CLOVES) syndrome, macrodactyly, and the megalencephaly syndrome, Megalencephaly‐Capillary malformation (MCAP) syndrome. We set out to refine the understanding of the clinical spectrum and natural history of these phenotypes, and now describe 35 patients with segmental overgrowth and somatic PIK3CA mutations. The phenotypic data show that these previously described disease entities have considerable overlap, and represent a spectrum. While this spectrum overlaps with Proteus syndrome (sporadic, mosaic, and progressive) it can be distinguished by the absence of cerebriform connective tissue nevi and a distinct natural history. Vascular malformations were found in 15/35 (43%) and epidermal nevi in 4/35 (11%) patients, lower than in Proteus syndrome. Unlike Proteus syndrome, 31/35 (89%) patients with PIK3CA mutations had congenital overgrowth, and in 35/35 patients this was asymmetric and disproportionate. Overgrowth was mild with little postnatal progression in most, while in others it was severe and progressive requiring multiple surgeries. Novel findings include: adipose dysregulation present in all patients, unilateral overgrowth that is predominantly left‐sided, overgrowth that affects the lower extremities more than the upper extremities and progresses in a distal to proximal pattern, and in the most severely affected patients is associated with marked paucity of adipose tissue in unaffected areas. While the current data are consistent with some genotype–phenotype correlation, this cannot yet be confirmed.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Copy-Number Disorders Are a Common Cause of Congenital Kidney Malformations

Simone Sanna-Cherchi; Krzysztof Kiryluk; Katelyn E. Burgess; Monica Bodria; Matthew Sampson; Dexter Hadley; Shannon N. Nees; Miguel Verbitsky; Brittany J. Perry; Roel Sterken; Vladimir J. Lozanovski; Anna Materna-Kiryluk; Cristina Barlassina; Akshata Kini; Valentina Corbani; Alba Carrea; Danio Somenzi; Corrado Murtas; Nadica Ristoska-Bojkovska; Claudia Izzi; Beatrice Bianco; Marcin Zaniew; Hana Flögelová; Patricia L. Weng; Nilgun Kacak; Stefania Giberti; Maddalena Gigante; Adela Arapović; Kristina Drnasin; Gianluca Caridi

We examined the burden of large, rare, copy-number variants (CNVs) in 192 individuals with renal hypodysplasia (RHD) and replicated findings in 330 RHD cases from two independent cohorts. CNV distribution was significantly skewed toward larger gene-disrupting events in RHD cases compared to 4,733 ethnicity-matched controls (p = 4.8 × 10(-11)). This excess was attributable to known and novel (i.e., not present in any database or in the literature) genomic disorders. All together, 55/522 (10.5%) RHD cases harbored 34 distinct known genomic disorders, which were detected in only 0.2% of 13,839 population controls (p = 1.2 × 10(-58)). Another 32 (6.1%) RHD cases harbored large gene-disrupting CNVs that were absent from or extremely rare in the 13,839 population controls, identifying 38 potential novel or rare genomic disorders for this trait. Deletions at the HNF1B locus and the DiGeorge/velocardiofacial locus were most frequent. However, the majority of disorders were detected in a single individual. Genomic disorders were detected in 22.5% of individuals with multiple malformations and 14.5% of individuals with isolated urinary-tract defects; 14 individuals harbored two or more diagnostic or rare CNVs. Strikingly, the majority of the known CNV disorders detected in the RHD cohort have previous associations with developmental delay or neuropsychiatric diseases. Up to 16.6% of individuals with kidney malformations had a molecular diagnosis attributable to a copy-number disorder, suggesting kidney malformations as a sentinel manifestation of pathogenic genomic imbalances. A search for pathogenic CNVs should be considered in this population for the diagnosis of their specific genomic disorders and for the evaluation of the potential for developmental delay.


Kidney International | 2014

Mutations in 12 known dominant disease-causing genes clarify many congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract

Daw Yang Hwang; Gabriel C. Dworschak; Stefan Kohl; Pawaree Saisawat; Asaf Vivante; Alina C. Hilger; Heiko Reutter; Neveen A. Soliman; Radovan Bogdanovic; Elijah O. Kehinde; Velibor Tasic; Friedhelm Hildebrandt

Congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) account for approximately half of children with chronic kidney disease. CAKUT can be caused by monogenic mutations, however, data are lacking on their frequency. Genetic diagnosis has been hampered by genetic heterogeneity and lack of genotype-phenotype correlation. To determine the percentage of cases with CAKUT that can be explained by mutations in known CAKUT genes, we analyzed the coding exons of the 17 known dominant CAKUT-causing genes in a cohort of 749 individuals from 650 families with CAKUT. The most common phenotypes in this CAKUT cohort were 288 with vesicoureteral reflux, 120 with renal hypodysplasia and 90 with unilateral renal agenesis. We identified 37 different heterozygous mutations (33 novel) in 12 of the 17 known genes in 47 patients from 41 of the 650 families (6.3%). These mutations include (number of families): BMP7 (1), CDC5L (1), CHD1L (5), EYA1 (3), GATA3 (2), HNF1B (6), PAX2 (5), RET (3), ROBO2 (4), SALL1 (9), SIX2 (1), and SIX5 (1). Furthermore, several mutations previously reported to be disease-causing are most likely benign variants. Thus, in a large cohort over 6% of families with isolated CAKUT are caused by a mutation in 12 of 17 dominant CAKUT genes. Our report represents one of the most in-depth diagnostic studies of monogenic causes of isolated CAKUT in children.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2016

Mutations in GANAB, Encoding the Glucosidase IIα Subunit, Cause Autosomal-Dominant Polycystic Kidney and Liver Disease.

Binu Porath; Vladimir G. Gainullin; Emilie Cornec-Le Gall; Elizabeth K. Dillinger; Christina M. Heyer; Katharina Hopp; Marie E. Edwards; Charles D. Madsen; Sarah R. Mauritz; Carly J. Banks; Saurabh Baheti; Bharathi Reddy; José Ignacio Herrero; Jesus M. Banales; Marie C. Hogan; Velibor Tasic; Terry Watnick; Arlene B. Chapman; Cécile Vigneau; Frédéric Lavainne; Marie Pierre Audrezet; Claude Férec; Yannick Le Meur; Vicente E. Torres; Peter C. Harris

Autosomal-dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is a common, progressive, adult-onset disease that is an important cause of end-stage renal disease (ESRD), which requires transplantation or dialysis. Mutations in PKD1 or PKD2 (∼85% and ∼15% of resolved cases, respectively) are the known causes of ADPKD. Extrarenal manifestations include an increased level of intracranial aneurysms and polycystic liver disease (PLD), which can be severe and associated with significant morbidity. Autosomal-dominant PLD (ADPLD) with no or very few renal cysts is a separate disorder caused by PRKCSH, SEC63, or LRP5 mutations. After screening, 7%-10% of ADPKD-affected and ∼50% of ADPLD-affected families were genetically unresolved (GUR), suggesting further genetic heterogeneity of both disorders. Whole-exome sequencing of six GUR ADPKD-affected families identified one with a missense mutation in GANAB, encoding glucosidase II subunit α (GIIα). Because PRKCSH encodes GIIβ, GANAB is a strong ADPKD and ADPLD candidate gene. Sanger screening of 321 additional GUR families identified eight further likely mutations (six truncating), and a total of 20 affected individuals were identified in seven ADPKD- and two ADPLD-affected families. The phenotype was mild PKD and variable, including severe, PLD. Analysis of GANAB-null cells showed an absolute requirement of GIIα for maturation and surface and ciliary localization of the ADPKD proteins (PC1 and PC2), and reduced mature PC1 was seen in GANAB(+/-) cells. PC1 surface localization in GANAB(-/-) cells was rescued by wild-type, but not mutant, GIIα. Overall, we show that GANAB mutations cause ADPKD and ADPLD and that the cystogenesis is most likely driven by defects in PC1 maturation.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2008

Renal phenotype in Lowe Syndrome: a selective proximal tubular dysfunction.

Detlef Bockenhauer; Arend Bökenkamp; William van’t Hoff; Elena Levtchenko; Joana E. Kist-van Holthe; Velibor Tasic; Michael Ludwig

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Lowe syndrome is defined by congenital cataracts, mental retardation, and proximal tubulopathy and is due to mutations in OCRL. Recently, mutations in OCRL were found to underlie some patients with Dent disease, characterized by low molecular weight proteinuria, hypercalciuria, and nephrocalcinosis. This phenotypic heterogeneity is poorly understood. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS The renal phenotype of 16 patients with Lowe syndrome (10.9 +/- 7.0 yr) under care of the authors was characterized to define overlap of symptoms with Dent disease and infer clues about OCRL function. Medical charts of patients were reviewed for data regarding glomerular filtration rate and markers of proximal tubular function. RESULTS All patients had low molecular weight proteinuria and albuminuria. Lysosomal enzymuria was elevated in all 11 patients assessed. Fifteen patients had hypercalciuria, and 14 aminoaciduria. Seven patients required bicarbonate and three required phosphate replacement; all others maintained normal serum values without supplementation. None of the patients had detectable glycosuria, and none had clinically overt rickets. GFR was mildly to moderately impaired and highly variable, with a trend of deterioration with age. CONCLUSIONS Patients with Lowe syndrome do not have renal Fanconi syndrome but a selective proximal tubulopathy, variable in extent and dominated by low molecular weight proteinuria and hypercalciuria, the classical features of Dent disease. These findings suggest that OCRL and ClC-5, the chloride channel mutated in Dent disease, are involved in similar reabsorption pathways in the proximal tubule.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2008

Twenty-one additional cases of familial renal glucosuria: absence of genetic heterogeneity, high prevalence of private mutations and further evidence of volume depletion

Joaquim J. Calado; Yves Sznajer; Daniel D. Metzger; Ana A. Rita; Marie M.C. Hogan; Antonis Kattamis; Mauro M. Scharf; Velibor Tasic; Johann Greil; Florian Brinkert; Markus J. Kemper; René Santer

INTRODUCTION Familial renal glucosuria (FRG) is a rare renal tubular disorder caused by mutations within the SLC5A2 gene. It is characterized by persistent glucosuria in the absence of hyperglycaemia and any other signs of generalized tubular dysfunction. In small series of patients previously reported, the molecular and phenotypic findings in FRG families, including first hints of extracellular volume depletion and activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system induced by natriuresis, have been described. We have now extended this analysis to another 21 consecutive cases from 17 pedigrees, including 11 cases with severe glucose excretion. METHODS Mutation analysis was performed by direct sequencing of the genomic coding segments of the SLC5A2 gene. In two cases with severe glucosuria, basal plasma renin activity and serum aldosterone concentrations were determined. RESULTS Within the 17 pedigrees, we have identified a total of 20 different SLC5A2 mutations. Fifteen have not been previously reported. In all glucosuric individuals tested, at least one SLC5A2 mutation could be identified. Heterozygous individuals were found to have only mild glucose excretion whereas homozygous or compound heterozygous patients had severe glucosuria, ranging from 10 to 86.5 g/1.73 m(2)/24 h. In two patients of the latter group, basal plasma renin activity and serum aldosterone concentration were determined and found to be raised to an average of 4.6-fold and 3.1-fold of the upper limit of the normal range, respectively. Discussion. The identification of at least one mutated allele in every affected individual in this cohort of 17 consecutively investigated families strongly suggests that genetic heterogeneity is not prevalent in FRG. Although 5 of the detected alleles have been described previously, 15 are novel, confirming that most mutations in FRG are private. Our finding of an activation of compensatory mechanisms for salt loss may warrant more detailed studies of long-term hormonal and metabolic imbalances in patients with FRG.


Kidney International | 2014

Whole-exome resequencing reveals recessive mutations in TRAP1 in individuals with CAKUT and VACTERL association

Pawaree Saisawat; Stefan Kohl; Alina C. Hilger; Daw-Yang Hwang; Heon Yung Gee; Gabriel C. Dworschak; Velibor Tasic; Tracie Pennimpede; Sivakumar Natarajan; Ethan D. Sperry; Danilo Swann Matassa; Nataša Stajić; Radovan Bogdanovic; Ivo de Blaauw; Carlo Marcelis; Charlotte H. W. Wijers; Enrika Bartels; Eberhard Schmiedeke; Dominik Schmidt; Sabine Grasshoff-Derr; Stefan Holland-Cunz; Michael Ludwig; Markus M. Nöthen; Markus Draaken; Erwin Brosens; Hugo A. Heij; Dick Tibboel; Bernhard G. Herrmann; Benjamin D. Solomon; Annelies de Klein

Congenital abnormalities of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) account for approximately half of children with chronic kidney disease and they are the most frequent cause of end-stage renal disease in children in the US. However, its genetic etiology remains mostly elusive. VACTERL association is a rare disorder that involves congenital abnormalities in multiple organs including the kidney and urinary tract in up to 60% of the cases. By homozygosity mapping and whole exome resequencing combined with high-throughput mutation analysis by array-based multiplex PCR and next-generation sequencing, we identified recessive mutations in the gene TNF receptor-associated protein 1 (TRAP1) in two families with isolated CAKUT and three families with VACTERL association. TRAP1 is a heat shock protein 90-related mitochondrial chaperone possibly involved in antiapoptotic and endoplasmic reticulum-stress signaling. Trap1 is expressed in renal epithelia of developing mouse kidney E13.5 and in the kidney of adult rats, most prominently in proximal tubules and in thick medullary ascending limbs of Henle’s loop. Thus, we identified mutations in TRAP1 as highly likely causing CAKUT or CAKUT in VACTERL association.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2013

Mutations in DSTYK and Dominant Urinary Tract Malformations

Simone Sanna-Cherchi; R.V. Sampogna; Natalia Papeta; Katelyn E. Burgess; Shannon N. Nees; Brittany J. Perry; Murim Choi; Monica Bodria; Yuanli Liu; Patricia L. Weng; Vladimir J. Lozanovski; Miguel Verbitsky; F. Lugani; Roel Sterken; Neal Paragas; Gianluca Caridi; Alba Carrea; M. Dagnino; Anna Materna-Kiryluk; G. Santamaria; C. Murtas; Nadica Ristoska-Bojkovska; Claudia Izzi; Nilgun Kacak; Beatrice Bianco; S. Giberti; Maddalena Gigante; G. Piaggio; Loreto Gesualdo; D. Kosuljandic Vukic

BACKGROUND Congenital abnormalities of the kidney and the urinary tract are the most common cause of pediatric kidney failure. These disorders are highly heterogeneous, and the etiologic factors are poorly understood. METHODS We performed genomewide linkage analysis and whole-exome sequencing in a family with an autosomal dominant form of congenital abnormalities of the kidney or urinary tract (seven affected family members). We also performed a sequence analysis in 311 unrelated patients, as well as histologic and functional studies. RESULTS Linkage analysis identified five regions of the genome that were shared among all affected family members. Exome sequencing identified a single, rare, deleterious variant within these linkage intervals, a heterozygous splice-site mutation in the dual serine-threonine and tyrosine protein kinase gene (DSTYK). This variant, which resulted in aberrant splicing of messenger RNA, was present in all affected family members. Additional, independent DSTYK mutations, including nonsense and splice-site mutations, were detected in 7 of 311 unrelated patients. DSTYK is highly expressed in the maturing epithelia of all major organs, localizing to cell membranes. Knockdown in zebrafish resulted in developmental defects in multiple organs, which suggested loss of fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signaling. Consistent with this finding is the observation that DSTYK colocalizes with FGF receptors in the ureteric bud and metanephric mesenchyme. DSTYK knockdown in human embryonic kidney cells inhibited FGF-stimulated phosphorylation of extracellular-signal-regulated kinase (ERK), the principal signal downstream of receptor tyrosine kinases. CONCLUSIONS We detected independent DSTYK mutations in 2.3% of patients with congenital abnormalities of the kidney or urinary tract, a finding that suggests that DSTYK is a major determinant of human urinary tract development, downstream of FGF signaling. (Funded by the National Institutes of Health and others.).


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2008

CLDN16 Genotype Predicts Renal Decline in Familial Hypomagnesemia with Hypercalciuria and Nephrocalcinosis

Martin Konrad; Jianghui Hou; Stefanie Weber; Jörg Dötsch; Jameela A. Kari; Tomáš Seeman; Eberhard Kuwertz-Bröking; Amira Peco-Antic; Velibor Tasic; Katalin Dittrich; Hammad O. Alshaya; Rodo O. von Vigier; Sabina Gallati; Daniel A. Goodenough; André Schaller

Familial hypomagnesemia with hypercalciuria and nephrocalcinosis (FHHNC) is a rare autosomal recessive tubular disorder caused by CLDN16 mutations. CLDN16 encodes the renal tight junction protein claudin-16, which is important for the paracellular reabsorption of calcium and magnesium in the thick ascending limb of Henle’s loop. That FHHNC is frequently associated with progressive renal failure suggests additional roles for claudin-16 in the maintenance of tight junction integrity. An investigation of 32 patients with FHHNC and 17 different mutations was previously reported; here, the analysis is expanded to 39 additional patients and 12 new mutations. Expression studies revealed that five of the12 new mutations led to partial loss of claudin-16 function and the remaining seven led to complete loss of function. The 23 patients who had mutations resulting in complete loss of function of both alleles were significantly younger at the onset of symptoms than the 46 patients who had at least one mutant allele providing partial function (2.2 versus 5.6 years; P _ 0.01). In addition, those with complete loss of function had a more rapid decline in GFR (7.3 versus 2.9 ml/min per 1.72 m2/y; P _ 0.01), leading to 54% requiring renal replacement therapy by age 15 compared with 20% of those with residual function (P _0.05). These data suggest that residual function of claudin-16 may delay the progression of renal failure in FHHN

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Zoran Gucev

Boston Children's Hospital

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Asaf Vivante

Boston Children's Hospital

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Shirlee Shril

Boston Children's Hospital

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Stefan Kohl

Boston Children's Hospital

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