1. Academic Validation
  2. De novo Uroplakin IIIa heterozygous mutations cause human renal adysplasia leading to severe kidney failure

De novo Uroplakin IIIa heterozygous mutations cause human renal adysplasia leading to severe kidney failure

  • J Am Soc Nephrol. 2005 Jul;16(7):2141-9. doi: 10.1681/ASN.2004090776.
Dagan Jenkins 1 Maria Bitner-Glindzicz Sue Malcolm Chih-Chi A Hu Jennifer Allison Paul J D Winyard Ambrose M Gullett David F M Thomas Rachel A Belk Sally A Feather Tung-Tien Sun Adrian S Woolf
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Nephro-Urology Unit, Institute of Child Health, University College London, 30 Guilford Street, London WC1E 1EH, UK. [email protected]
Abstract

Human renal adysplasia usually occurs sporadically, and bilateral disease is the most common cause of childhood end-stage renal failure, a condition that is lethal without intervention using dialysis or transplantation. De novo heterozygous mutations in Uroplakin IIIa (UPIIIa) are reported in four of 17 children with kidney failure caused by renal adysplasia in the absence of an overt urinary tract obstruction. One girl and one boy in unrelated kindreds had a missense mutation at a CpG dinucleotide in the cytoplasmic domain of UPIIIa (Pro273Leu), both of whom had severe vesicoureteric reflux, and the girl had persistent cloaca; two other patients had de novo mutations in the 3' UTR (963 T-->G; 1003 T-->C), and they had renal adysplasia in the absence of any other anomaly. The mutations were absent in all sets of parents and in siblings, none of whom had radiologic evidence of renal adysplasia, and mutations were absent in two panels of 192 ethnically matched control chromosomes. UPIIIa was expressed in nascent urothelia in ureter and renal pelvis of human embryos, and it is suggested that perturbed urothelial differentiation may generate human kidney malformations, perhaps by altering differentiation of adjacent smooth muscle cells such that the metanephros is exposed to a functional obstruction of urine flow. With advances in renal replacement therapy, children with renal failure, who would otherwise have died, are surviving to adulthood. Therefore, although the mechanisms of action of the UPIIIa mutations have yet to be determined, these findings have important implications regarding genetic counseling of affected individuals who reach reproductive age.

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