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Coinheritance of COL4A5 and MYO1E mutations accentuate the severity of kidney disease.

Lennon, Rachel; Stuart, Helen M; Bierzynska, Agnieszka; Randles, Michael J; Kerr, Bronwyn; Hillman, Katherine A; Batra, Gauri; Campbell, Joanna; Storey, Helen; Flinter, Frances A; Koziell, Ania; Welsh, Gavin I; Saleem, Moin A; Webb, Nicholas J A; Woolf, Adrian S

Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, Germany). 2015;.

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mutations in podocyte and basement membrane genes are associated with a growing spectrum of glomerular disease affecting adults and children. Investigation of familial cases has helped to build understanding of both normal physiology and disease. METHODS: We investigated a consanguineous family with a wide clinical phenotype of glomerular disease using clinical, histological, and new genetic studies. RESULTS: We report striking variability in severity of nephropathy within an X-linked Alport syndrome (XLAS) family. Four siblings each carried a mutant COL4A5 allele, p.(Gly953Val) and p.(Gly1033Arg). Two boys had signs limited to hematuria and mild/moderate proteinuria. In striking contrast, a sister presented with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) at 8 years of age and an infant brother presented with nephrotic syndrome, progressing to ESRD by 3 years of age. Both were subsequently found to have homozygous variants in MYO1E, p.(Lys118Glu) and p.(Thr876Arg). MYO1E is a gene implicated in focal segmental glomerulosclerosis and it encodes a podocyte-expressed non-muscle myosin. Bioinformatic modeling demonstrated that the collagen IV-alpha3,4,5 extracellular network connected via known protein-protein interactions to intracellular myosin 1E. CONCLUSIONS: COL4A5 and MYO1E mutations may summate to perturb common signaling pathways, resulting in more severe disease than anticipated independently. We suggest screening for MYO1E and other non-COL4 'podocyte gene' mutations in XLAS when clinical nephropathy is more severe than expected for an individual's age and sex.

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Digital Object Identifier:
10.1007/s00467-015-3067-9
Pubmed Identifier:
25739341
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Active

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Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:260649
Created by:
Stuart, Helen
Created:
8th March, 2015, 12:26:29
Last modified by:
Stuart, Helen
Last modified:
19th June, 2015, 19:07:20

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