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Hum Mol Genet ; 24(18): 5211-8, 2015 Sep 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26123494

RESUMO

Meckel-Gruber syndrome (MKS) is a perinatally lethal disorder characterized by the triad of occipital encephalocele, polydactyly and polycystic kidneys. Typical of other disorders related to defective primary cilium (ciliopathies), MKS is genetically heterogeneous with mutations in a dozen genes to date known to cause the disease. In an ongoing effort to characterize MKS clinically and genetically, we implemented a gene panel and next-generation sequencing approach to identify the causal mutation in 25 MKS families. Of the three families that did not harbor an identifiable causal mutation by this approach, two mapped to a novel disease locus in which whole-exome sequencing revealed the likely causal mutation as a homozygous splicing variant in TMEM107, which we confirm leads to aberrant splicing and nonsense-mediated decay. TMEM107 had been independently identified in two mouse models as a cilia-related protein and mutant mice display typical ciliopathy phenotypes. Our analysis of patient fibroblasts shows marked ciliogenesis defect with an accompanying perturbation of sonic hedgehog signaling, highly concordant with the cellular phenotype in Tmem107 mutants. This study shows that known MKS loci account for the overwhelming majority of MKS cases but additional loci exist including MKS13 caused by TMEM107 mutation.


Assuntos
Transtornos da Motilidade Ciliar/genética , Encefalocele/genética , Loci Gênicos , Proteínas de Membrana/genética , Mutação , Doenças Renais Policísticas/genética , Alelos , Cílios/genética , Cílios/metabolismo , Transtornos da Motilidade Ciliar/diagnóstico , Transtornos da Motilidade Ciliar/metabolismo , Consanguinidade , Análise Mutacional de DNA , Encefalocele/diagnóstico , Encefalocele/metabolismo , Feminino , Heterogeneidade Genética , Genótipo , Proteínas Hedgehog/metabolismo , Humanos , Masculino , Linhagem , Doenças Renais Policísticas/diagnóstico , Doenças Renais Policísticas/metabolismo , Retinose Pigmentar , Transdução de Sinais
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