Multiple, independent, common variants at RET, SEMA3 and NRG1 gut enhancers specify Hirschsprung disease risk in European ancestry subjects.

Journal: Journal Of Pediatric Surgery
Published:
Abstract

Objective: Hirschsprung disease (HSCR) is a developmental disorder of the enteric nervous system (ENS) characterized by congenital aganglionosis arising from coding variants in ENS genes causing partial or total loss-of-function. Low-penetrance, common, noncoding variants at RET, SEMA3 and NRG1 loci are also associated with HSCR, with small-to-moderate loss of gene expression mediated through sequence variants in cis-regulatory elements (CRE) as another causal mechanism. Since these latter variants are common, many individuals carry multiple risk variants. However, the extent and combinatorial effects of all putative CRE variants within and across these loci on HSCR is unknown.

Methods: Using 583 HSCR subjects, one of the largest samples of European ancestry studied, and genotyping 56 tag variants, we evaluated association of all common variants overlapping putative gut CREs and fine-mapped causal variants at RET, SEMA3 and NRG1.

Results: We demonstrate that 28 and 8 tag variants, several of which are genetically independent, overlap putative-enhancers at the RET and SEMA3 loci, respectively, as well as two fine-mapped tag variants at the NRG1 locus, are significantly associated with HSCR. Importantly, disease risk increases with increasing numbers of risk alleles from multiple variants within and across these loci, varying >25-fold across individuals.

Conclusions: This increasing allele number-dependent risk, we hypothesize, arises from HSCR-relevant ENS cells sensing the reduced gene expression at multiple ENS genes since their developmental effects are integrated through gene regulatory networks.

Authors
Ashish Kapoor, Priyanka Nandakumar, Dallas Auer, Maria Sosa, Holly Ross, Juli Bollinger, Jia Yan, Courtney Berrios
Relevant Conditions

Hirschsprung Disease