Genome-Wide Copy Number Analysis Uncovers a New HSCR Gene: NRG3

Clara Sze-Man Tang(University of Hong Kong), Guo Cheng(University of Hong Kong), Man‐Ting So(University of Hong Kong), Benjamin Hon Kei Yip(University of Hong Kong), Xiaoping Miao(Huazhong University of Science and Technology), Emily Hoi-Man Wong(University of Hong Kong), Esw Ngan(University of Hong Kong), Vincent Chi‐Hang Lui(University of Hong Kong), You‐Qiang Song(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Danny Chan(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Kmc Cheung(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Zhenwei Yuan(China Medical University), Lei Liu(Shenzhen Children's Hospital), Bhy Chung(University of Hong Kong), Xuelai Liu(University of Hong Kong), Kenneth Kak‐Yuen Wong(University of Hong Kong), Christian R. Marshall(Hospital for Sick Children), Steve Scherer(University of Toronto), Stacey S. Cherny(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Pak-Chung Sham(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Paul Kwong‐Hang Tam(University of Hong Kong), María-Mercé García-Barceló(University of Hong Kong)
PLoS Genetics
May 10, 2012
Cited by 59Open Access
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Abstract

Hirschsprung disease (HSCR) is a congenital disorder characterized by aganglionosis of the distal intestine. To assess the contribution of copy number variants (CNVs) to HSCR, we analysed the data generated from our previous genome-wide association study on HSCR patients, whereby we identified NRG1 as a new HSCR susceptibility locus. Analysis of 129 Chinese patients and 331 ethnically matched controls showed that HSCR patients have a greater burden of rare CNVs (p = 1.50 × 10(-5)), particularly for those encompassing genes (p = 5.00 × 10(-6)). Our study identified 246 rare-genic CNVs exclusive to patients. Among those, we detected a NRG3 deletion (p = 1.64 × 10(-3)). Subsequent follow-up (96 additional patients and 220 controls) on NRG3 revealed 9 deletions (combined p = 3.36 × 10(-5)) and 2 de novo duplications among patients and two deletions among controls. Importantly, NRG3 is a paralog of NRG1. Stratification of patients by presence/absence of HSCR-associated syndromes showed that while syndromic-HSCR patients carried significantly longer CNVs than the non-syndromic or controls (p = 1.50 × 10(-5)), non-syndromic patients were enriched in CNV number when compared to controls (p = 4.00 × 10(-6)) or the syndromic counterpart. Our results suggest a role for NRG3 in HSCR etiology and provide insights into the relative contribution of structural variants in both syndromic and non-syndromic HSCR. This would be the first genome-wide catalog of copy number variants identified in HSCR.


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