PLoS Genetics (Jan 2012)

Genome-wide copy number analysis uncovers a new HSCR gene: NRG3.

  • Clara Sze-Man Tang,
  • Guo Cheng,
  • Man-Ting So,
  • Benjamin Hon-Kei Yip,
  • Xiao-Ping Miao,
  • Emily Hoi-Man Wong,
  • Elly Sau-Wai Ngan,
  • Vincent Chi-Hang Lui,
  • You-Qiang Song,
  • Danny Chan,
  • Kenneth Cheung,
  • Zhen-Wei Yuan,
  • Liu Lei,
  • Patrick Ho-Yu Chung,
  • Xue-Lai Liu,
  • Kenneth Kak-Yuen Wong,
  • Christian R Marshall,
  • Stephen W Scherer,
  • Stacey S Cherny,
  • Pak-Chung Sham,
  • Paul Kwong-Hang Tam,
  • Maria-Mercè Garcia-Barceló

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1002687
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 5
p. e1002687

Abstract

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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.