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Thirteen novel NPHS1 mutations in a large cohort of children with congenital nephrotic syndrome

  • Saskia F. Heeringa
  • , Christopher N. Vlangos
  • , Gil Chernin
  • , Bernward Hinkes
  • , Rasheed Gbadegesin
  • , Jinhong Liu
  • , Bethan E. Hoskins
  • , Fatih Ozaltin
  • , Friedhelm Hildebrandt
  • , A. Noyan
  • , A. Bakkaloglu
  • , S. Spranger
  • , S. Briese
  • , D. Müller
  • , U. Querfeld
  • , G. Reusz
  • , R. Bogdanovic
  • , B. Beck
  • , B. Hoppe
  • , M. T.F. Wolf
  • K. Dittrich, J. Dötsch, C. Plank, E. M. Rüth, W. Rascher, P. Hoyer, M. Schröder, M. Brandis, A. Fuchshuber, M. Pohl, C. V. Schnakenburg, C. Mache, F. Schäfer, T. Knüppel, O. Mehls, B. Tönshoff, D. Wenning, M. Kemper, D. E. Müller-Wiefel, J. H.H. Ehrich, G. Offner, M. Barenbrock, T. Jungraithmayr, B. Zimmerhackl, J. Misselwitz, S. Wygoda, D. Böckenhauer, M. Schuhmacher, M. Benz, M. Griebel, J. Höfele, L. Weber, H. Fehrenbach, M. Bulla, E. Kuwertz-Bröcking, A. Schulze Everding, M. Shenoy, L. Patzer, T. Seeman, A. Gianviti, G. Rizzoni, O. Amon, C. Licht, J. Mühleder, G. Laube, T. Neuhaus, T. Stuckert

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

73 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background. Congenital nephrotic syndrome (CNS) is de- fined as nephrotic syndrome that manifests at birth or within the first 3 months of life. Most patients develop end-stage renal disease (ESRD) within 2 to 3 years of life. CNS of the Finnish-type (CNF) features a rather specific renal histology and is caused by recessive mutations in the NPHS1 gene encoding nephrin, a major structural protein of the glomerular slit-diaphragm. So far, more than 80 different mutations of NPHS1 causing CNF have been published. Methods. Here, we performed mutation analysis of NPHS1 by exon sequencing in a worldwide cohort of 32 children with CNS from 29 different families. Results. Sixteen of the 29 families (55%) were found to have two disease-causing alleles in NPHS1. Two additional patients had a single heterozygous mutation in NPHS1. Thirteen of a total of 20 different mutations detected were novel (65%). These were five missense mutations, one nonsense mutation, three deletions, one insertion and three splice-site mutations. Conclusion. Our data expand the spectrum of known NPHS1 mutations by >15% in a worldwide cohort. Surprisingly, two patients with disease-causing mutations showed a relatively mild phenotype, as one patient had a partial remission with steroid treatment and one patient had normal renal function 1 year after the onset of disease. The increased number of known mutations will facilitate future studies into genotype/phenotype correlations.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3527-3533
Number of pages7
JournalNephrology Dialysis Transplantation
Volume23
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2008

Keywords

  • CNS
  • NPHS1
  • Novel mutations

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