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Benign familial hematuria and Alport syndrome are common causes of familial hematuria among children and young adults, which are attributable to variants in the collagen type IV alpha chain genes, , , or . The study was conducted to identify the underlying genetic causes in patients with familial hematuria. Two unrelated Han-Chinese pedigrees with familial hematuria were recruited for this study. Whole exome sequencing was combined with analysis to identify potential genetic variants, followed by variant confirmation by Sanger sequencing. Reverse transcription, PCR, and Sanger sequencing were performed to evaluate the effect of the detected splicing variant on mRNA splicing. A novel heterozygous splicing c.595-1G>A variant and a known heterozygous c.1715G>C variant in the collagen type IV alpha 4 chain gene () were identified and confirmed in patients of pedigree 1 and pedigree 2, respectively. Complementary DNA analysis indicated this splicing variant could abolish the canonical splice acceptor site and cause a single nucleotide deletion of exon 10, which was predicted to produce a truncated protein. The two variants, c.595-1G>A variant and c.1715G>C (p.Gly572Ala) variant, were identified as the genetic etiologies of two families with familial hematuria, respectively. Our study broadened the variant spectrum of the gene and explained the possible pathogenesis, which will benefit clinical management and genetic counseling.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9868811PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2022.1064491DOI Listing

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