Whole genome sequencing in adults with clinical hallmarks of hypophosphatasia negative for ALPL variants
-
Published:2024-09-14
Issue:1
Volume:51
Page:
-
ISSN:0301-4851
-
Container-title:Molecular Biology Reports
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Mol Biol Rep
Author:
Seefried LotharORCID, Petryk AnnaORCID, del Angel GuillermoORCID, Reder Felix, Bauer PeterORCID
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Hypophosphatasia (HPP) is a rare disease caused by deficient activity of tissue-nonspecific alkaline phosphatase (ALP), encoded by the ALPL gene. The primary objective was to explore novel ALPL variants by whole genome sequencing (WGS) in patients with HPP who previously tested negative by standard methods for ALPL variants. The secondary objective was to search for genes beyond ALPL that may reduce ALP activity or contribute to HPP symptoms.
Methods and results
WGS was performed in 16 patients clinically diagnosed with HPP who had ALP activity below the normal range and tested negative for ALPL variants. Genetic variants in ALPL and genes possibly associated with low ALP activity or phenotypic overlap with HPP were assessed. All 16 patients had ALP activity below the normal range. WGS did not identify any novel disease-causing ALPL variants. Positive findings for other gene variants were identified in 4 patients: 1 patient presented with variants in COL1A1, NLRP12, and SCN9A, coding for collagen, type, I alpha-1 chain, nod-like receptor pyrin domain containing 12, and sodium voltage-gated channel alpha subunit 9, respectively; 1 presented with a heterozygous, likely pathogenic variant in P3H1 coding for prolyl 3 hydroxylase 1; 1 presented with a heterozygous pathogenic variant in SGCE, coding for sarcoglycan epsilon; and 1 presented with a heterozygous variant of uncertain significance in VDR, encoding vitamin D receptor.
Conclusion
Genomic analysis did not identify novel ALPL variants or a pattern of disease-causing variants in genes other than ALPL to explain the HPP phenotype in these patients.
Registration
Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT04925804.
Funder
Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference25 articles.
1. Khan A, Brandi ML, Rush ET, Ali DS, Al-Alwani H, Almonaei K, Alsarraf F, Bacrot S, Dahir K, Dandurand K, Deal C, Ferrari SL, Giusti F, Guyatt G, Hatcher E, Ing SW, Javaid MK, Khan S, Kocijan R, Linglart A, M’Hiri I, Marini F, Nunes ME, Rockman-Greenberg C, Roux C, Seefried L, Simmons JH, Starling SR, Ward LM, Yao L, Brignardello-Petersen R, Lewiecki EM (2024) Hypophosphatasia diagnosis: current state of the art and proposed diagnostic criteria for children and adults. Osteoporos Int 35:431–438. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00198-023-06844-1 2. Michigami T, Ohata Y, Fujiwara M, Mochizuki H, Adachi M, Kitaoka T, Kubota T, Sawai H, Namba N, Hasegawa K, Fujiwara I, Ozono K (2020) Clinical practice guidelines for hypophosphatasia. Clin Pediatr Endocrinol 29:9–24. https://doi.org/10.1297/cpe.29.9 3. Kishnani PS, Rush ET, Arundel P, Bishop N, Dahir K, Fraser W, Harmatz P, Linglart A, Munns CF, Nunes ME, Saal HM, Seefried L, Ozono K (2017) Monitoring guidance for patients with hypophosphatasia treated with asfotase alfa. Mol Genet Metab 122:4–17. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymgme.2017.07.010 4. Mornet E, Hofmann C, Bloch-Zupan A, Girschick H, Le Merrer M (2014) Clinical utility gene card for: hypophosphatasia – update 2013. Eur J Hum Genet 22. https://doi.org/10.1038/ejhg.2013.177 5. JKU Faculty of Medicine (2023) The ALPL gene variant database [OMIM *171760]. https://alplmutationdatabase.jku.at/. Accessed August 16, 2024
|
|