A complementary study approach unravels novel players in the pathoetiology of Hirschsprung disease

Author:

Mederer Tanja,Schmitteckert Stefanie,Volz Julia,Martínez CristinaORCID,Röth Ralph,Thumberger ThomasORCID,Eckstein VolkerORCID,Scheuerer Jutta,Thöni CorneliaORCID,Lasitschka FelixORCID,Carstensen Leonie,Günther Patrick,Holland-Cunz StefanORCID,Hofstra RobertORCID,Brosens ErwinORCID,Rosenfeld Jill A.ORCID,Schaaf Christian P.ORCID,Schriemer Duco,Ceccherini IsabellaORCID,Rusmini MartaORCID,Tilghman JosephORCID,Luzón-Toro Berta,Torroglosa Ana,Borrego SaludORCID,Sze-man Tang ClaraORCID,Garcia-Barceló Mercè,Tam Paul,Paramasivam NagarajanORCID,Bewerunge-Hudler MelanieORCID,De La Torre CarolinaORCID,Gretz Norbert,Rappold Gudrun A.,Romero Philipp,Niesler BeateORCID

Abstract

Hirschsprung disease (HSCR, OMIM 142623) involves congenital intestinal obstruction caused by dysfunction of neural crest cells and their progeny during enteric nervous system (ENS) development. HSCR is a multifactorial disorder; pathogenetic variants accounting for disease phenotype are identified only in a minority of cases, and the identification of novel disease-relevant genes remains challenging. In order to identify and to validate a potential disease-causing relevance of novel HSCR candidate genes, we established a complementary study approach, combining whole exome sequencing (WES) with transcriptome analysis of murine embryonic ENS-related tissues, literature and database searches, in silico network analyses, and functional readouts using candidate gene-specific genome-edited cell clones. WES datasets of two patients with HSCR and their non-affected parents were analysed, and four novel HSCR candidate genes could be identified: ATP7A, SREBF1, ABCD1 and PIAS2. Further rare variants in these genes were identified in additional HSCR patients, suggesting disease relevance. Transcriptomics revealed that these genes are expressed in embryonic and fetal gastrointestinal tissues. Knockout of these genes in neuronal cells demonstrated impaired cell differentiation, proliferation and/or survival. Our approach identified and validated candidate HSCR genes and provided further insight into the underlying pathomechanisms of HSCR.

Funder

Heinz and Heide Dürr Stiftung

Heidelberg Stiftung Chirurgie

Medizinischen Fakultät Heidelberg, Universität Heidelberg

Dres. Majic/Majic Schlez Stiftung

Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

Theme-Based Research Scheme

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Cancer Research,Genetics(clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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