Double homozygous missense mutations in DACH1 and BMP4 in a patient with bilateral cystic renal dysplasia

R Schild, T Knüppel, M Konrad… - Nephrology Dialysis …, 2013 - academic.oup.com
R Schild, T Knüppel, M Konrad, C Bergmann, A Trautmann, MJ Kemper, K Wu, S Yaklichkin…
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation, 2013academic.oup.com
Renal hypodysplasia (RHD) is characterized by small and/or disorganized kidneys following
abnormal organogenesis. Mutations in several genes have been identified recently to be
associated with RHD in humans, including BMP4, a member of the transforming growth
factor (TGF)-β family of growth factors. DACH1 has been proposed as a candidate gene for
RHD because of its involvement in the EYA-SIX-DACH network of renal developmental
genes. Here, we present a patient with renal dysplasia carrying homozygous missense …
Abstract
Renal hypodysplasia (RHD) is characterized by small and/or disorganized kidneys following abnormal organogenesis. Mutations in several genes have been identified recently to be associated with RHD in humans, including BMP4, a member of the transforming growth factor (TGF)-β family of growth factors. DACH1 has been proposed as a candidate gene for RHD because of its involvement in the EYA-SIX-DACH network of renal developmental genes. Here, we present a patient with renal dysplasia carrying homozygous missense mutations in both BMP4 (p.N150K) and DACH1 (p.R684C). The genotype–phenotype correlation in the family hints at an oligogenic mode of inheritance of the disease in this kindred. Functional analyses of the identified DACH1 mutation in HEK293T cells demonstrated enhanced suppression of the TGF-β pathway suggesting that both mutations could act synergistically in the development of the phenotype in this patient. This finding provides a model for RHD as an oligo-/polygenic disorder and supports a role for DACH1 in the development of RHD in humans.
Oxford University Press