Hirschsprung disease (HSCR, 1/5,000 live births) is characterized by the congenital absence of enteric neurons and ganglia ganglion cells in the hindgut, leading to intestinal obstruction. The length of aganglionosis is variable and correlates with the severity of the disease. Despite the high number of sporadic cases (80%), segregation analyses showed that HSCR is inherited as a complex sex-modified oligogenic trait with: i) a skewed sex-ratio (4/1); ii) an overall risk to siblings of 4% (relative risk l= 1/200), and iii) pedigrees (20% of cases) that suggest an incompletely penetrant major locus, now identified as the RET proto-oncogene. Despite these results, the molecular pathology at the RET locus, genes other than RET contributing to HSCR development, and the physiopathologic bases of this malformation remain unknown. To address these questions, an International HSCR Consortium for patients genotyping was established, with the participation of 6 groups working in 3 different continents: Baltimore (Aravinda Chakravarti); Paris (Stanislas Lyonnet); Genoa (Isabella Ceccherini); Groningen (Robert Hofstra ); Hong Kong (Paul Tam) and Seville (Salud Borrego). The collaborative effort allowed to assemble a large cohort of HSCR patients and their families, yielding a resource for the understanding of the genetic and molecular bases of such a complex disease. We have already collected and started to genotype 876 HSCR families (2,672 individuals) for 14 markers at the RET locus. Overall, a non coding enhancer mutation showed the highest transmission to affected sibs. The genetic distribution of that variant is consistent with the higher prevalence of HSCR in Chinese than in Caucasian populations. Moreover, HSCR risk was shown to vary by the patients’ length of aganglionosis, gender and presence of coding mutations. Following these preliminary studies, our goals are to: i) deepen the role of the RET gene in the molecular genetics of HSCR, ii) study the molecular bases and the complex genetic model behind the oligogenic predisposition to HSCR, and, thereby, iii) identify new genes involved in the development of the neural crests from which the entire enteric nervous system originates. programme.
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HSCR
Submitted by josecobos on Wed, 2011-08-24 12:13
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France
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Hong Kong
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Italy
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Spain
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The Netherlands
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USA
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Project Coordinator
Stanislas Lyonnet
Inserm/ University of Paris V
Paris
France
Partners
| Aravinda Chakravarti |
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
McKusick-Nathans Institute of Genetic Medicine |
Baltimore | USA |
| Isabella Ceccherini |
IRCCS - Instituto Giannina Gaslini
Laboratorio di Genetica Molecolare |
Genova | Italy |
| Paul Kwong Hang Tam |
The University of Hong Kong
Surgery |
Hong Kong | China |
| Robert Hofstra |
University Medical Center Groningen
University of Groningen
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Groningen | The Netherlands |
| Salud Borrego |
Hospitales Universitarios Virgen del Rocio (HUVR)
Unidad Clinica de Genética y Reproduccion
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Seville | Spain |
International Hirschsprung Disease Consortium
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