Publications by authors named "K Billot"

Article Synopsis
  • There are about 8,000 rare diseases that affect around 400 million people, with many not getting diagnosed quickly.
  • Ciliopathies, a type of rare disease, are hard to diagnose because they have many different symptoms and genetic causes.
  • The study tested three online systems that help diagnose these diseases using patient records, but they didn't perform as well as expected and highlighted the need for better tools and data quality.
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Nephronophthisis (NPH) is an autosomal-recessive ciliopathy representing one of the most frequent causes of kidney failure in childhood characterized by a broad clinical and genetic heterogeneity. Applied to one of the worldwide largest cohorts of patients with NPH, genetic analysis encompassing targeted and whole exome sequencing identified disease-causing variants in 600 patients from 496 families with a detection rate of 71%. Of 788 pathogenic variants, 40 known ciliopathy genes were identified.

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Nephronophthisis (NPH) is an autosomal recessive tubulointerstitial nephropathy belonging to the ciliopathy disorders and known as the most common cause of hereditary end-stage renal disease in children. Yet, no curative treatment is available. The major gene, NPHP1, encodes a protein playing key functions at the primary cilium and cellular junctions.

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Renal ciliopathies are the leading cause of inherited kidney failure. In autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), mutations in the ciliary gene PKD1 lead to the induction of CCL2, which promotes macrophage infiltration in the kidney. Whether or not mutations in genes involved in other renal ciliopathies also lead to immune cells recruitment is controversial.

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