AI Article Synopsis

  • Cholestatic liver disease is commonly referred to pediatric liver transplant centers, with inherited disorders being a significant cause of this condition in infants.
  • A study of 166 participants with intrahepatic cholestasis revealed that 31% had identifiable disease-causing genetic variants, including metabolic and syndromic liver diseases.
  • The research highlighted the importance of re-analyzing whole-exome sequencing data, leading to new discoveries of genetic causes and potential novel candidate genes associated with cholestasis.

Article Abstract

Background And Aims: Cholestatic liver disease is a leading referral to pediatric liver transplant centers. Inherited disorders are the second most frequent cause of cholestasis in the first month of life.

Methods: We retrospectively characterized the genotype and phenotype of 166 participants with intrahepatic cholestasis, and re-analyzed phenotype and whole-exome sequencing (WES) data from patients with previously undetermined genetic etiology for newly published genes and novel candidates. Functional validations of selected variants were conducted in cultured cells.

Results: Overall, we identified disease-causing variants in 31% (52/166) of our study participants. Of the 52 individuals, 18 (35%) had metabolic liver diseases, 9 (17%) had syndromic cholestasis, 9 (17%) had progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis, 3 (6%) had bile acid synthesis defects, 3(6%) had infantile liver failure and 10 (19%) had a phenocopy of intrahepatic cholestasis. By reverse phenotyping, we identified a de novo variant c.1883G > A in FAM111B of a case with high glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT) cholestasis. By re-analyzing WES data, two patients were newly solved, who had compound heterozygous variants in recently published genes KIF12 and USP53, respectively. Our additional search for novel candidates in unsolved WES families revealed four potential novel candidate genes (NCOA6, CCDC88B, USP24 and ATP11C), among which the patients with variants in NCOA6 and ATP11C recapitulate the cholestasis phenotype in mice models.

Conclusions: In a single-center pediatric cohort, we identified monogenic variants in 22 known human intrahepatic cholestasis or phenocopy genes, explaining up to 31% of the intrahepatic cholestasis patients. Our findings suggest that re-evaluating existing WES data from well-phenotyped patients on a regular basis can increase the diagnostic yield for cholestatic liver disease in children.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12072-023-10553-6DOI Listing

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