Mutation-dependent recessive inheritance of NPHS2-associated steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome

K Tory, DK Menyhárd, S Woerner, F Nevo… - Nature …, 2014 - nature.com
K Tory, DK Menyhárd, S Woerner, F Nevo, O Gribouval, A Kerti, P Stráner, C Arrondel…
Nature genetics, 2014nature.com
Monogenic disorders result from defects in a single gene. According to Mendel's laws, these
disorders are inherited in either a recessive or dominant fashion. Autosomal-recessive
disorders require a disease-causing variant on both alleles, and according to our current
understanding, their pathogenicities are not influenced by each other. Here we present an
autosomal-recessive disorder, nephrotic syndrome type 2 (MIM 600995), in which the
pathogenicity of an NPHS2 allele encoding p. Arg229Gln depends on the trans-associated …
Abstract
Monogenic disorders result from defects in a single gene. According to Mendel's laws, these disorders are inherited in either a recessive or dominant fashion. Autosomal-recessive disorders require a disease-causing variant on both alleles, and according to our current understanding, their pathogenicities are not influenced by each other. Here we present an autosomal-recessive disorder, nephrotic syndrome type 2 (MIM 600995), in which the pathogenicity of an NPHS2 allele encoding p.Arg229Gln depends on the trans-associated mutation. We show that, contrary to expectations, this allele leads to a disease phenotype only when it is associated specifically with certain 3′ NPHS2 mutations because of an altered heterodimerization and mislocalization of the encoded p.Arg229Gln podocin. The disease-associated 3′ mutations exert a dominant-negative effect on p.Arg229Gln podocin but behave as recessive alleles when associated with wild-type podocin. Therefore, the transmission rates for couples carrying the disease-associated mutations and p.Arg229Gln may be substantially different from those expected in autosomal-recessive disorders.
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