Abstract

Background: Whole exome sequencing (WES) is becoming part of routine clinical and diagnostic practice. In the investigation of inherited cystic kidney disease and renal ciliopathy syndromes, WES has been extensively applied in research studies as well as for diagnostic utility to detect various novel genes and variants. The yield of WES critically depends on the characteristics of the patient population. Methods: In this study, we selected 8 unrelated Omani children, presenting with renal ciliopathy syndromes with a positive family history and originating from consanguineous families. We performed WES in affected children to determine the genetic cause of disease and to test the yield of this approach, coupled with homozygosity mapping, in this highly selected population. DNA library construction and WES was carried out using SureSelect Human All Exon V6 Enrichment Kit and Illumina HiSeq platform. For variants filtering and annotation Qiagen Variant Ingenuity tool was used. Nexus copy number software from BioDiscovery was used for evaluation of copy number variants and whole gene deletions. Patient and parental DNA was used to confirm mutations and the segregation of alleles using Sanger sequencing. Results: Genetic analysis identified 4 potential causative homozygous variants each confirmed by Sanger sequencing in 4 clinically relevant ciliopathy syndrome genes, (TMEM231, TMEM138, WDR19 and BBS9), leading to an overall diagnostic yield of 50%. Conclusions: WES coupled with homozygosity mapping provided a diagnostic yield of 50% in this selected population. This genetic approach needs to be embedded into clinical practise to allow confirmation of clinical diagnosis, to inform genetic screening as well as family planning decisions. Half of the patients remain without diagnosis highlighting the technical and interpretational hurdles that need to be overcome in the future.

Highlights

  • There are over 750 million people worldwide affected with chronic kidney disease (CKD), a disease burden that is much higher than those living with diabetes, cancer or even AIDS/HIV1

  • Whole exome sequencing (WES) was used to determine the genetic causes of cystic kidney disease and renal ciliopathy syndromes in a group of 8 unrelated Omani children from consanguineous families

  • The focus of nephrogenetics in Oman is primarily to establish an accurate genetic diagnosis to explain clinical phenotypes using the significantly improved diagnostic power of genomic technologies

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Summary

Introduction

There are over 750 million people worldwide affected with chronic kidney disease (CKD), a disease burden that is much higher than those living with diabetes, cancer or even AIDS/HIV1. Inherited kidney diseases and renal ciliopathy syndromes are one of the major contributors to CKD burden, where up to 10% of adults and over 70% of children reaching end stage kidney disease (ESKD) are expected to harbour genetic causes[2]. Studying such rare diseases has considerable challenges mainly due to the small size of patient cohorts negatively affecting progress of treatments and commercial feasibility. In the investigation of inherited cystic kidney disease and renal ciliopathy syndromes, WES has been extensively applied in research studies as well as for diagnostic utility to detect various novel genes and variants. Results: Genetic analysis identified 4 potential causative homozygous variants each confirmed by Sanger sequencing in 4 clinically relevant ciliopathy syndrome genes, (TMEM231, TMEM138, WDR19 and BBS9), version 2

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