13 research outputs found
Association of candidate pharmacogenetic markers with platinum-induced ototoxicity: PanCareLIFE dataset
Genetic association studies suggest a genetic predisposition for cisplatin-induced ototoxicity. Among other candidate genes, thiopurine methyltransferase (TPMT) is considered a critical gene for susceptibility to cisplatin-induced hearing loss in a pharmacogenetic guideline. The PanCareLIFE cross-sectional cohort study evaluated the genetic associations in a large pan-European population and assessed the diagnostic accuracy of the genetic markers. 1,112 pediatric cancer survivors who had provided biomaterial for genotyping were screened for participation in the pharmacogenetic association study. 900 participants qualified for inclusion. Based on the assessment of original audiograms, patients were assigned to three phenotype categories: no, minor, and clinically relevant hearing loss. Fourteen variants in eleven candidate genes (ABCC3, OTOS, TPMT, SLC22A2, NFE2L2, SLC16A5, LRP2, GSTP1, SOD2, WFS1, and ACYP2) were genotyped. The genotype and phenotype data represent a resource for conducting meta-analyses to derive a more precise pooled estimate of the effects of genes on the risk of hearing loss due to platinum treatment
Mouse mutant phenotyping at scale reveals novel genes controlling bone mineral density.
The genetic landscape of diseases associated with changes in bone mineral density (BMD), such as osteoporosis, is only partially understood. Here, we explored data from 3,823 mutant mouse strains for BMD, a measure that is frequently altered in a range of bone pathologies, including osteoporosis. A total of 200 genes were found to significantly affect BMD. This pool of BMD genes comprised 141 genes with previously unknown functions in bone biology and was complementary to pools derived from recent human studies. Nineteen of the 141 genes also caused skeletal abnormalities. Examination of the BMD genes in osteoclasts and osteoblasts underscored BMD pathways, including vesicle transport, in these cells and together with in silico bone turnover studies resulted in the prioritization of candidate genes for further investigation. Overall, the results add novel pathophysiological and molecular insight into bone health and disease
A resource of targeted mutant mouse lines for 5,061 genes.
The International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium reports the generation of new mouse mutant strains for more than 5,000 genes, including 2,850 novel null, 2,987 novel conditional-ready and 4,433 novel reporter alleles
Extensive identification of genes involved in congenital and structural heart disorders and cardiomyopathy.
Clinical presentation of congenital heart disease is heterogeneous,
making identification of the disease-causing genes and their genetic
pathways and mechanisms of action challenging. By using in vivo
electrocardiography, transthoracic echocardiography and microcomputed
tomography imaging to screen 3,894 single-gene-null mouse lines for
structural and functional cardiac abnormalities, here we identify 705
lines with cardiac arrhythmia, myocardial hypertrophy and/or ventricular
dilation. Among these 705 genes, 486 have not been previously
associated with cardiac dysfunction in humans, and some of them
represent variants of unknown relevance (VUR). Mice with mutations in Casz1, Dnajc18, Pde4dip, Rnf38 or Tmem161b
genes show developmental cardiac structural abnormalities, with their
human orthologs being categorized as VUR. Using UK Biobank data, we
validate the importance of the DNAJC18 gene for cardiac
homeostasis by showing that its loss of function is associated with
altered left ventricular systolic function. Our results identify
hundreds of previously unappreciated genes with potential function in
congenital heart disease and suggest causal function of five VUR in
congenital heart disease