Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • 11– nephronophthisis (1)
  • acid amino acid (1)
  • acid amino acid (1)
  • across (2)
  • adult (3)
  • adult- disease (1)
  • allele (12)
  • apoptosis (1)
  • blue (4)
  • cancer (16)
  • cases (3)
  • cerebellar ataxia (1)
  • children (2)
  • chr2 (1)
  • chronic disease (1)
  • cilia (3)
  • cilium (1)
  • ckd stage 4 (1)
  • cohorts (5)
  • cross over (2)
  • data quality (1)
  • del (1)
  • dependent (17)
  • diagnosis (5)
  • disease and (3)
  • domain protein (1)
  • england (19)
  • father (1)
  • feed (1)
  • file (2)
  • gene (47)
  • genomes (7)
  • genotypes (6)
  • GRCh38 (2)
  • hg38 (1)
  • homo sapiens (1)
  • human (7)
  • human chromosome (1)
  • hypotonia (1)
  • icd 10 (3)
  • legal guardian (1)
  • loss benefit (1)
  • low (4)
  • main (5)
  • mother (1)
  • mri scans (1)
  • nephritis (1)
  • nephron (1)
  • nephronophthisis (9)
  • new york (2)
  • normal (4)
  • NPHP1 (56)
  • oligohydramnios (1)
  • organelles (1)
  • parent (3)
  • patients (16)
  • PDE6B (1)
  • phase (4)
  • phenotypes (9)
  • photoreceptor cells (1)
  • polyuria (1)
  • proband (2)
  • problem (1)
  • protein domains (1)
  • protein family (1)
  • registry (1)
  • relatives (1)
  • relatives no (1)
  • renal disease (1)
  • saliva (1)
  • sh3 domain (2)
  • sign (1)
  • system analysis (1)
  • ten (7)
  • therapies (1)
  • tooth (1)
  • v2 1 (3)
  • vertebrates (1)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    Autosomal recessive whole gene deletions of nephrocystin-1 (NPHP1) result in abnormal structure and function of the primary cilia. These deletions can result in a tubulointerstitial kidney disease known as nephronophthisis and retinal (Senior-Løken syndrome) and neurological (Joubert syndrome) diseases. Nephronophthisis is a common cause of end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) in children and up to 1% of adult onset ESKD. Single nucleotide variants (SNVs) and small insertions and deletions (Indels) have been less well characterised. We used a gene pathogenicity scoring system (GenePy) and a genotype-to-phenotype approach on individuals recruited to the UK Genomics England (GEL) 100,000 Genomes Project (100kGP) (n = 78,050). This approach identified all participants with NPHP1-related diseases reported by NHS Genomics Medical Centres and an additional eight participants. Extreme NPHP1 gene scores, often underpinned by clear recessive inheritance, were observed in patients from diverse recruitment categories, including cancer, suggesting the possibility of a more widespread disease than previously appreciated. In total, ten participants had homozygous CNV deletions with eight homozygous or compound heterozygous with SNVs. Our data also reveals strong in-silico evidence that approximately 44% of NPHP1 related disease may be due to SNVs with AlphaFold structural modelling evidence for a significant impact on protein structure. This study suggests historical under-reporting of SNVS in NPHP1 related diseases compared with CNVs. © 2023. The Author(s).

    Citation

    Gary Leggatt, Guo Cheng, Sumit Narain, Luis Briseño-Roa, Jean-Philippe Annereau, Genomics England Research Consortium, Christine Gast, Rodney D Gilbert, Sarah Ennis. A genotype-to-phenotype approach suggests under-reporting of single nucleotide variants in nephrocystin-1 (NPHP1) related disease (UK 100,000 Genomes Project). Scientific reports. 2023 Jun 09;13(1):9369

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 37296294

    View Full Text