Genome-wide linkage and association study implicates the 10q26 region as a major genetic contributor to primary nonsyndromic vesicoureteric reflux

Vesicoureteric reflux (VUR) is the commonest urological anomaly in children. Despite treatment improvements, associated renal lesions – congenital dysplasia, acquired scarring or both – are a common cause of childhood hypertension and renal failure. Primary VUR is familial, with transmission rate an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2017-11, Vol.7 (1), p.14595-13, Article 14595
Hauptverfasser: Darlow, John M., Darlay, Rebecca, Dobson, Mark G., Stewart, Aisling, Charoen, Pimphen, Southgate, Jennifer, Baker, Simon C., Xu, Yaobo, Hunziker, Manuela, Lambert, Heather J., Green, Andrew J., Santibanez-Koref, Mauro, Sayer, John A., Goodship, Timothy H. J., Puri, Prem, Woolf, Adrian S., Kenda, Rajko B., Barton, David E., Cordell, Heather J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Vesicoureteric reflux (VUR) is the commonest urological anomaly in children. Despite treatment improvements, associated renal lesions – congenital dysplasia, acquired scarring or both – are a common cause of childhood hypertension and renal failure. Primary VUR is familial, with transmission rate and sibling risk both approaching 50%, and appears highly genetically heterogeneous. It is often associated with other developmental anomalies of the urinary tract, emphasising its etiology as a disorder of urogenital tract development. We conducted a genome-wide linkage and association study in three European populations to search for loci predisposing to VUR. Family-based association analysis of 1098 parent-affected-child trios and case/control association analysis of 1147 cases and 3789 controls did not reveal any compelling associations, but parametric linkage analysis of 460 families (1062 affected individuals) under a dominant model identified a single region, on 10q26, that showed strong linkage (HLOD = 4.90; ZLRLOD = 4.39) to VUR. The ~9Mb region contains 69 genes, including some good biological candidates. Resequencing this region in selected individuals did not clearly implicate any gene but FOXI2 , FANK1 and GLRX3 remain candidates for further investigation. This, the largest genetic study of VUR to date, highlights the 10q26 region as a major genetic contributor to VUR in European populations.
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-017-15062-9