Abstract
Autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease is an inherited kidney disease. This study aims to detect rare and common DNA variants of the PKHD1 gene using next-generation sequencing (NGS) and to classify them in terms of being pathogenic according to The American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics. NGS analysis was performed on the DNA of 304 patients who were referred to Ege University Molecular Medicine Laboratory with suspected polycystic kidney disease. As a result, a total of 82 different DNA variants, 16 of which were novel, were detected. The breakdown of the variants found is as follows: 73 (89.02%) were missense variants, six (7.32%) nonsense variants, two (2.44%) frameshift deletions, and one (1.22%) nonframeshift deletion. According to The American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics classification of these variants, 26 were benign (Class 5), two were likely benign (Class 4), 36 were of uncertain significance (Class 3), and nine were likely pathogenic (Class 2), nine of which are pathogenic variants (Class 1). Heterozygosity was found in 39 (63.9%) patients, homozygosity in six (9.8%) patients, compound heterozygosity in 12 (19.7%) patients, and complex genotype in four (6.6%) patients in which variants in Class 1, Class 2 and Class 3 were determined according to ACMG classification. When the exon distributions of the DNA variants detected in the PKHD1 gene were analyzed, the most common exons of the DNA variant are exon 32 (n = 9), exon 58 (n = 8), exon 67 (n = 6), exon 61 (n = 5), 30 exons (n = 4). This fast and economical molecular diagnostic approach will provide a reliable prenatal diagnostic option, enabling definitive disease diagnosis and the identification of carriers.
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