Background: Congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) are one of the most common malformations identified in the fetal stage. Bilateral renal agenesis (BRA) represents the most severe and fatal form of CAKUT. Only three genes have been confirmed to have a causal role in humans (ITGA8, GREB1L, and FGF20).
Methods: Genome sequencing within a diagnostic setting and combined data repository analysis identified a novel gene.
Results: Two patients presented with BRA, detected during the prenatal period, without additional recognizable malformations. They had parental consanguinity and similarly affected, deceased siblings, suggesting autosomal recessive inheritance. Evaluation of homozygous regions in patient 1 identified a novel, nonsense variant in GFRA1 (NM_001348097.1:c.676C>T, p.[Arg226*]). We identified 184 patients in our repository with renal agenesis and analyzed their exome/genome data. Of these 184 samples, 36 were from patients who presented with isolated renal agenesis. Two of them had loss-of-function variants in GFRA1. The second patient was homozygous for a frameshift variant (NM_001348097.1:c.1294delA, p.[Thr432Profs*13]). The GFRA1 gene encodes a receptor on the Wolffian duct that regulates ureteric bud outgrowth in the development of a functional renal system, and has a putative role in the pathogenesis of Hirschsprung disease.
Conclusions: These findings strongly support the causal role of GFRA1-inactivating variants for an autosomal recessive, nonsyndromic form of BRA. This knowledge will enable early genetic diagnosis and better genetic counseling for families with BRA.
Keywords: gene expression; genetics and development; renal agenesis.
Copyright © 2021 by the American Society of Nephrology.