Unexpected genetic heterogeneity for primary ciliary dyskinesia in the Irish Traveller population.

Eur J Hum Genet

1] Genetics Department, Temple Street Children's University Hospital, Dublin 1, Ireland [2] Academic Centre on Rare Diseases, School of Medicine and Medical Sciences, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland [3] National Centre for Medical Genetics, Our Lady's Children's Hospital, Crumlin, Dublin 12, Ireland.

Published: February 2015

We present a study of five children from three unrelated Irish Traveller families presenting with primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD). As previously characterized disorders in the Irish Traveller population are caused by common homozygous mutations, we hypothesised that all three PCD families shared the same recessive mutation. However, exome sequencing showed that there was no pathogenic homozygous mutation common to all families. This finding was supported by histology, which showed that each family has a different type of ciliary defect; transposition defect (family A), nude epithelium (family B) and absence of inner and outer dynein arms (family C). Therefore, each family was analysed independently using homozygosity mapping and exome sequencing. The affected siblings in family A share a novel 1 bp duplication in RSPH4A (NM_001161664.1:c.166dup; p.Arg56Profs*11), a radial-spoke head protein involved in ciliary movement. In family B, we identified three candidate genes (CCNO, KCNN3 and CDKN1C), with a 5-bp duplication in CCNO (NM_021147.3:c.258_262dup; p.Gln88Argfs*8) being the most likely cause of ciliary aplasia. This is the first study to implicate CCNO, a DNA repair gene reported to be involved in multiciliogenesis, in PCD. In family C, we identified a ∼3.5-kb deletion in DYX1C1, a neuronal migration gene previously associated with PCD. This is the first report of a disorder in the relatively small Irish Traveller population to be caused by >1 disease gene. Our study identified at least three different PCD genes in the Irish Traveller population, highlighting that one cannot always assume genetic homogeneity, even in small consanguineous populations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4297907PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ejhg.2014.79DOI Listing

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