Rare variants analyses suggest novel cleft genes in the African population

Author:

Alade Azeez,Mossey Peter,Awotoye Waheed,Busch Tamara,Oladayo Abimbola M.,Aladenika Emmanuel,Olujitan Mojisola,Wentworth Emma,Anand Deepti,Naicker Thirona,Gowans Lord J. J.,Eshete Mekonen A.,Adeyemo Wasiu L.,Zeng Erliang,Van Otterloo Eric,O’Rorke Michael,Adeyemo Adebowale,Murray Jeffrey C.,Cotney Justin,Lachke Salil A.,Romitti Paul,Butali Azeez

Abstract

AbstractNon-syndromic orofacial clefts (NSOFCs) are common birth defects with a complex etiology. While over 60 common risk loci have been identified, they explain only a small proportion of the heritability for NSOFCs. Rare variants have been implicated in the missing heritability. Thus, our study aimed to identify genes enriched with nonsynonymous rare coding variants associated with NSOFCs. Our sample included 814 non-syndromic cleft lip with or without palate (NSCL/P), 205 non-syndromic cleft palate only (NSCPO), and 2150 unrelated control children from Nigeria, Ghana, and Ethiopia. We conducted a gene-based analysis separately for each phenotype using three rare-variants collapsing models: (1) protein-altering (PA), (2) missense variants only (MO); and (3) loss of function variants only (LOFO). Subsequently, we utilized relevant transcriptomics data to evaluate associated gene expression and examined their mutation constraint using the gnomeAD database. In total, 13 genes showed suggestive associations (p = E−04). Among them, eight genes (ABCB1, ALKBH8, CENPF, CSAD, EXPH5, PDZD8, SLC16A9, and TTC28) were consistently expressed in relevant mouse and human craniofacial tissues during the formation of the face, and three genes (ABCB1, TTC28, and PDZD8) showed statistically significant mutation constraint. These findings underscore the role of rare variants in identifying candidate genes for NSOFCs.

Funder

IADR/Smile Train

NIH/NIDCR

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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