Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5589695 | Gene | 2017 | 22 Pages |
Abstract
Currarino Syndrome is a rare congenital malformation syndrome described as a triad of anorectal, sacral and presacral anomalies. Currarino Syndrome is reported to be both familial and sporadic. Familial CS is today known as an autosomal dominant disorder caused by mutations in the transcription factor MNX1. The aim of this study was to look for genetic causes of Currarino Syndrome in sporadic patients after ruling out other causes, like chromosome aberrations, disease-causing variants in possible MNX1 cooperating transcription factors and aberrant methylation in the promoter of the MNX1 gene. The hypothesis was that MNX1 was affected through interactions with other transcription factors or through other regulatory elements and thereby possibly leading to abnormal function of the gene. We performed whole exome sequencing with an additional 6Â Mb custom made region on chromosome 7 (GRCh37/hg19, chr7:153.138.664-159.138.663) to detect regulatory elements in non-coding regions around the MNX1 gene. We did not find any variants in genes of interest shared between the patients. However, after analyzing the whole exome sequencing data with Filtus, the in-house SNV filtration program, we did find some interesting variants in possibly relevant genes that could be explaining these patients` phenotypes. The most promising genes were ETV3L, ARID5A and NCAPD3. To our knowledge this is the first report of whole exome sequencing in sporadic CS patients.
Keywords
SRY-box 9sex-determining region YGATKPTF1AMNX1SNVREKETsSIFTARMSox9CNVGenome Analysis ToolkitMRIBAMMagnetic resonance imagingCurrarino syndromeSryfluorescence in situ hybridizationpolymorphism phenotypingFishSorting Intolerant From TolerantmegabaseAnorectal malformationsCopy number variantbasepairPolyPhensingle nucleotide variant
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Genetics
Authors
Ingunn Holm, Mari Spildrejorde, Barbro Stadheim, Kristin L. Eiklid, Pubudu S. Samarakoon,