Abstract

Congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) represent the primary cause of chronic kidney disease in children. Many genes have been attributed to the genesis of this disorder. Recently, haploinsufficiency of PBX1 caused by microdeletions has been shown to result in bilateral renal hypoplasia and other organ malformations. Here, we report on a 14-year-old male patient with congenital bilateral dysplastic kidneys, cryptorchidism, hypoplastic clavicles, developmental delay, impaired intelligence, and minor dysmorphic features. Presuming a syndromic origin, we performed SNP array analysis to scan for large copy number variations (CNVs) followed by whole-exome sequencing (WES). Sanger sequencing was done to confirm the variant's de novo status. SNP array analysis did not reveal any microdeletions or -duplications larger than 50 or 100 kb, respectively. WES identified a novel heterozygous 7-bp frameshift deletion in PBX1 (c.413_419del, p.Gly138Valfs*40) resulting in a loss-of-function. The de novo status could be confirmed by Sanger sequencing. By WES, we identified a novel heterozygous de novo 7-bp frameshift deletion in PBX1. Our findings expand the spectrum of causative variants in PBX1-related CAKUT. In this case, WES proved to be the apt technique to detect the variant responsible for the patient's phenotype, as single gene testing is not feasible given the multitude of genes involved in CAKUT and SNP array analysis misses rare single-nucleotide variants and small Indels.

Highlights

  • Congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) represent the primary cause of chronic kidney disease in children

  • The patient was born at a gestational age of 38 weeks [birth weight: 2,840 g (25th–50th percentile), birth length: 48 cm (10th–25th percentile)]

  • There were no obvious malformations noted at birth

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Summary

Introduction

Congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) represent the primary cause of chronic kidney disease in children. Disruption of the normal nephrogenesis by pathogenic variants in genes involved in kidney development is a basic principle of CAKUT [2]. When it comes to heterogeneous diseases like CAKUT, with many different genes involved, large-scale next-generation sequencing has become an extremely useful tool for the unbiased detection of pathogenic variants [3]. In whole-exome sequencing (WES), the coding regions (the exome) of the human genome are enriched and sequenced This has proven to be both an economic, as the exome only comprises 1% of the genome, and a pragmatic approach, as about 85% of disease-related variants can be found in the exome [4]

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