BackgroundAutosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD) is an early-onset form of polycystic kidney disease that often leads to devastating outcomes for patients. ARPKD is caused by mutations in the PKHD1 gene, an extensive gene that encodes for the ciliary protein fibrocystin/polyductin. Next-generation sequencing is presently the best option for molecular diagnosis of ARPKD. Our aim was to set up the first study of ARPKD patients from the Czech Republic, to determine the composition of their mutations and genotype-phenotype correlations, along with establishment of next-generation sequencing of the PKHD1 gene that could be used for the diagnosis of ARPKD patients.MethodsMutational analysis of the PKHD1 gene was performed in 24 families using the amplicon-based next-generation sequencing (NGS) technique. In patients without 2 causal mutations identified by NGS, subsequent MLPA analysis of the PKHD1 gene was carried out.ResultsTwo underlying mutations were detected in 54 % of families (n = 13), one mutation in 13 % of families (n = 3), and in 33 % of families (n = 8) no mutation could be detected. Overall, seventeen different mutations (5 novel) were detected, including deletion of one exon. The detection rate in our study reached 60 % in the entire cohort of patients; but 90 % in the group of patients who fulfilled all clinical criteria of ARPKD, and 42 % in the group of patients with unknown kidney pathology. The most frequent mutation was T36M, accounting for nearly 21 % of all identified mutations.ConclusionsNext-generation sequencing of the PKHD1 gene is a very useful method of molecular diagnosis in patients with a full clinical picture of ARPKD, and it has a high detection rate. Furthermore, its relatively low costs and rapidity allow the molecular genetic analysis of patients without the full clinical criteria of ARPKD, who might also have mutations in the PKHD1 gene.
BackgroundAutosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is the most common hereditary renal disorder caused by mutation in either one of two genes, PKD1 and PKD2. High structural and sequence complexity of PKD genes makes the mutational diagnostics of ADPKD challenging. The present study is the first detailed analysis of both PKD genes in a cohort of Czech patients with ADPKD using High Resolution Melting analysis (HRM) and Multiplex Ligation-dependent Probe Amplification (MLPA).MethodsThe mutational analysis of PKD genes was performed in a set of 56 unrelated patients. For mutational screening of the PKD1 gene, the long-range PCR (LR-PCR) strategy followed by nested PCR was used. Resulting PCR fragments were analyzed by HRM; the positive cases were reanalyzed and confirmed by direct sequencing. Negative samples were further examined for sequence changes in the PKD2 gene by the method of HRM and for large rearrangements of both PKD1 and PKD2 genes by MLPA.ResultsScreening of the PKD1 gene revealed 36 different likely pathogenic germline sequence changes in 37 unrelated families/individuals. Twenty-five of these sequence changes were described for the first time. Moreover, a novel large deletion was found within the PKD1 gene in one patient. Via the mutational analysis of the PKD2 gene, two additional likely pathogenic mutations were detected.ConclusionsProbable pathogenic mutation was detected in 71% of screened patients. Determination of PKD mutations and their type and localization within corresponding genes could help to assess clinical prognosis of ADPKD patients and has major benefit for prenatal and/or presymptomatic or preimplantational diagnostics in affected families as well.
Cystic kidney diseases are a very heterogeneous group of chronic kidney diseases. The diagnosis is usually based on clinical and ultrasound characteristics and the final diagnosis is often difficult to be made. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) may help the clinicians to find the correct final diagnosis. The aim of our study was to test the diagnostic yield of NGS and its ability to improve the diagnosis precision in a heterogeneous group of children with cystic kidney diseases. Next-generation sequencing of genes responsible for the formation of cystic kidneys was performed in 31 unrelated patients with various clinically diagnosed cystic kidney diseases gathered at the Department of Pediatrics of Motol University Hospital in Prague between 2013 and 2018. The underlying pathogenic variants were detected in 71% of patients (n = 22), no or only one (in case of autosomal recessive inheritance) pathogenic variant was found in 29% of patients (n = 9). The result of NGS correlated with the clinical diagnosis made before the NGS in 55% of patients (n = 17), in the remaining 14 children (45%) the result of NGS revealed another type of cystic kidney disease that was suspected clinically before or did not find causal mutation in suspected genes. The most common unexpected findings were variants in nephronophthisis (NPHP) genes in children with clinically suspected autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD, n = 4). Overall, 24 pathogenic or probably pathogenic variants were detected in the PKHD1 gene, 8 variants in the TMEM67 gene, 4 variants in the PKD1 gene, 2 variants in the HNF1B gene and 2 variants in BBS1 and NPHP1 genes, respectively. NGS is a valuable tool in the diagnostics of various forms of cystic kidney diseases. Its results changed the clinically based diagnoses in 16% (n = 5) of the children.
BackgroundAutosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is the most common hereditary renal disorder, leading to end stage renal failure and kidney transplantation in its most serious form. The severity of the disease’s manifestation depends on the genetic determination of ADPKD. The huge variability of different phenotypes (even within a single family) is not only modulated by the two main ADPKD genes (PKD1 and PKD2) but also by modifier genes and the whole genetic background.Case presentationThis is a report of an ADPKD family with co-inheritance of PKD1 and PKD2 pathogenic variants. The proband, with an extremely serious manifestation of ADPKD (the man was diagnosed in early childhood, and with end stage renal disease aged 23), underwent genetic analysis of PKD1 and PKD2, which revealed the presence of pathogenic mutations in both of these genes. The missense PKD2 mutation p.Arg420Gly came from the proband’s father, with a mild ADPKD phenotype. The same mutation of the PKD2 gene and similar mild disease presentation were found in the proband’s aunt (father’s sister) and her son. The nonsense mutation p.Gln2196* within the PKD1 gene was probably inherited from the proband’s mother, who died at the age of 45. It was only discovered post mortem, that the real cause of her death was kidney failure as a consequence of untreated ADPKD. Unfortunately, neither the DNA of the proband’s mother nor the DNA of any other family members from this side of the pedigree were available for further examination. The proband underwent successful cadaveric kidney transplantation at the age of 24, and this replacement therapy lasted for the next 15 years.ConclusionsHere, we present a first case of bilineal ADPKD inheritance in the Czech Republic. This report highlights the significant role of modifier genes in genetic determination of ADPKD, especially in connection with seriously deteriorated disease phenotypes. In our case, the modifying role is probably mediated by the PKD2 gene.
Objective : Arterial hypertension is a common complication in patients with autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD), occurring in 33-75% of children when measured by office blood pressure (OBP). Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) is a superior tool for investigating blood pressure relative to OBP. The aim of our study was to investigate the prevalence and control of hypertension in children with ARPKD based on ABPM.Methods: This retrospective study evaluated 36 children with ARPKD and at least one ABPM performed in two our tertiary paediatric nephrology centres and 29 children with at least two ABPM. Ambulatory hypertension was defined as mean daytime or night-time BP at least 95th percentile or use of antihypertensives and controlled hypertension as normal ambulatory BP in children on antihypertensive drugs. Results:The first ABPM study revealed ambulatory hypertension in 94% of children. Untreated or uncontrolled ambulatory hypertension was diagnosed in 67% and controlled hypertension in only 28%. Masked hypertension was found in 5.5% and white-coat hypertension in 14%. The last ABPM study revealed ambulatory hypertension in 86% (all 86% hypertensive children on drugs, i.e. no untreated hypertension), the prevalence of controlled hypertension increased to 59%. Masked hypertension was detected in 8.3% and whitecoat hypertension in 10%. Ambulatory blood pressure correlated neither with kidney length nor with glomerular filtration rate. Echocardiography demonstrated left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) in 27% of children at the time of their first ABPM. Conclusion:The prevalence of ambulatory hypertension is very high in children with ARPKD, while the control of hypertension improves over time.
During standard molecular diagnostic procedure, two Czech families with APC (Adenomatous polyposis coli gene) mosaicism have been detected. A woman with attenuated familial adenomatous polyposis (AFAP, OMIM #175100) was recently inspected by next generation sequencing. Standard bioinformatics pipeline, restricted to variants with at least 20% of reads (for germline variants) would miss mutation p.G1412X (NM_000038.5) present in 17% of reads. This novel variant was not present in any of her two children. Another woman with a clinical manifestation of attenuated FAP was tested 16 years ago without conclusive APC mutation found when denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE), protein truncation test (PTT), multiplex ligation probe amplification (MLPA) and direct Sanger sequencing were applied. Recent inspection of her son showed clear mutation p.Q1062X (NM_000038.5, NP_000029.2) leading to premature stop codon. This finding led to re-evaluation of this protein position in his mother and detection of mosaicism (11% of allele, 22% of heterozygous cells in blood), which was primarily overlooked. Mutations in both patients were confirmed by allele-specific real time PCR (AS qPCR). In both index patients it was possible to detect and quantify the mosaic allele in biological samples of polyps, adjacent colonic mucosa and buccal swabs. In cases of sporadic appearance of FAP, besides blood we plan to preferably inspect also other samples, where mosaic fraction might be under detection limit of bioinformatics pipelines (<3%). For our future routine NGS sequencing analysis we will apply our in-house somatic variant detection pipeline to minimize the false negative calls when genes with high level of de-novo mutations are analyzed.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS NEK8/NPHP9 encodes a protein that localizes to the primary cilium. Biallelic NEK8 variants are known to cause multiorgan developmental defects, including kidney cystic dysplasia and extensive extra-renal defects, with heterozygous carrier parents being asymptomatic [1]. This autosomal recessive inheritance is the most common inheritance mode for ciliopathies. Complementary to this, we now propose a dominant negative effect for specific heterozygous NEK8 missense variants in the kinase domain resulting in an autosomal-dominant ciliopathy. METHOD We performed genetic testing in patients from several medical centers. To explore the consequences of the identified NEK8 variants, we are performing cilia staining assays in patients' skin fibroblast and kidney cells, as well as in mIMCD3 cells overexpressing the identified variants. Furthermore, we are examining the impact of the NEK8 variants on replication stress response. RESULTS We identified three distinct heterozygous NEK8 variants in 12 families (Table 1), all leading to missense alterations in the kinase domain. Interestingly the p.Arg45Trp variant is a recurrent variant we detected in 10 unrelated families. All patients have a kidney phenotype that varies from mild focal segmental glomerulosclerosis to prenatal presentation with polycystic kidneys. Most patients have kidney failure needing kidney replacement therapy at varying ages of onset. In all patients, we thoroughly checked whether a second variant could be found. Furthermore, the large symptomatic family and de novo occurrences favor a dominant inheritance mode. Our preliminary results from functional studies show abnormal primary cilia formation in serum-starved cells as well as increased replication stress. CONCLUSION We present the first evidence for a pathogenic effect of heterozygous NEK8 variants. Remarkably our patients present with a kidney limited phenotype as compared to the multiorgan defects found in patients with biallelic variants. This reveals a new mode of inheritance for NEK8 variants and expands genotype-phenotype correlations for this gene.
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