Prioritization and burden analysis of rare variants in 208 candidate genes suggest they do not play a major role in CAKUT

  • Nicolaou, N.
  • Pulit, S.L.
  • Nijman, IJ
  • Monroe, G.R.
  • Feitz, W.F.J.
  • Schreuder, M.F.
  • Eerde, A.M. van
  • Jong, T.P. de
  • Giltay, J.C.
  • Zwaag, B. van der
  • Havenith, M.R.
  • Zwakenberg, S.
  • Zanden, L.F.M. van der
  • Poelmans, G.J.V.
  • Cornelissen, E.A.M.
  • Lilien, M.R.
  • Franke, B.
  • Roeleveld, N.
  • Rooij, I.A.L.M. van
  • Cuppen, E.
  • Bongers, E.M.H.F.
  • Giles, R.H.
  • Knoers, N.V.A.M.
  • Renkema, K.Y.
Publication date
January 2016

Abstract

The leading cause of end-stage renal disease in children is attributed to congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT). Familial clustering and mouse models support the presence of monogenic causes. Genetic testing is insufficient as it mainly focuses on HNF1B and PAX2 mutations that are thought to explain CAKUT in 5-15% of patients. To identify novel, potentially pathogenic variants in additional genes, we designed a panel of genes identified from studies on familial forms of isolated or syndromic CAKUT and genes suggested by in vitro and in vivo CAKUT models. The coding exons of 208 genes were analyzed in 453 patients with CAKUT using next-generation sequencing. Rare truncating, splice-site variants, and non-synonymous var...

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