17 research outputs found
Discovery and analysis of genes important in kidney development and disease
Abnormal kidney development is a relatively prevalent health issue; however, the genetic basis is mostly unknown. The aim of this thesis is to identify genes important in kidney development and disease and to study their molecular functions. We hypothesized that human diseases associated with kidney anomalies can uncover novel genes important in kidney development and disease. The thesis is divided into three independent projects that examined three genes (i.e. Zeb2, Ilk, Robo2) at three stages of mouse kidney development: nephrogenesis, glomerular podocyte, and early ureteric bud outgrowth.
In the first project, we identified Zeb2, a gene encoding the zinc finger E-box binding homeobox 2 transcription factor that is mutated in the Mowat Wilson syndrome, as a novel gene important in nephrogenesis. Zeb2 conditional knockout mice (Zeb2 cKO) develop glomerulocystic kidney disease with many atubular glomeruli and decreased expression of proximal tubular markers before cyst formation. These data suggest that abnormal nephrogenesis leads to the congenital atubular glomeruli and primary glomerular cysts in the Zeb2 cKO mice. This study implies that ZEB2 is a novel candidate gene for glomerular cystic disease in patients. Additionally we found that Pkd1, the gene mutated in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease, is upregulated in non-cystic glomeruli and knockout of one copy of the Pkd1 gene exacerbates the cystic phenotype of the Zeb2 cKO mice. These findings suggest a genetic interaction between Zeb2 and Pkd1 and that Zeb2 might be a novel PKD1 modifier.
In the second project, we studied the roles of integrin-linked kinase (ILK) and roundabout 2 (ROBO2) in glomerular podocytes. We found that ILK and ROBO2 form a protein complex, and that loss of Robo2 improves survival and alleviates the podocyte and basement membrane abnormalities seen in Ilk knockout mice. In the third project, using microarray gene expression analysis, we found lower gene expression levels of extracellular matrix proteins during early ureteric bud outgrowth in the Robo2 homozygous knockout embryos as compared to wild type controls. These findings suggest that ROBO2 may regulate extracellular matrix components in the kidney.
In conclusion, we found a new role for Zeb2 in nephrogenesis, and identified a novel function of Robo2 in regulating extracellular matrix gene expression in podocytes and during early kidney development.2017-11-03T00:00:00
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An electronic health record (EHR) log analysis shows limited clinician engagement with unsolicited genetic test results
How clinicians utilize medically actionable genomic information, displayed in the electronic health record (EHR), in medical decision-making remains unknown. Participating sites of the Electronic Medical Records and Genomics (eMERGE) Network have invested resources into EHR integration efforts to enable the display of genetic testing data across heterogeneous EHR systems. To assess clinicians' engagement with unsolicited EHR-integrated genetic test results of eMERGE participants within a large tertiary care academic medical center, we analyzed automatically generated EHR access log data. We found that clinicians viewed only 1% of all the eMERGE genetic test results integrated in the EHR. Using a cluster analysis, we also identified different user traits associated with varying degrees of engagement with the EHR-integrated genomic data. These data contribute important empirical knowledge about clinicians limited and brief engagements with unsolicited EHR-integrated genetic test results of eMERGE participants. Appreciation for user-specific roles provide additional context for why certain users were more or less engaged with the unsolicited results. This study highlights opportunities to use EHR log data as a performance metric to more precisely inform ongoing EHR-integration efforts and decisions about the allocation of informatics resources in genomic research
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Pilot Study of Return of Genetic Results to Patients in Adult Nephrology
Background and objectives: Actionable genetic findings have implications for care of patients with kidney disease, and genetic testing is an emerging tool in nephrology practice. However, there are scarce data regarding best practices for return of results and clinical application of actionable genetic findings for kidney patients.
Design, setting, participants and measurements: We developed a Return of Results workflow in collaborations with clinicians for the retrospective re-contact of adult nephrology patients who had been recruited into a biobank research study for exome sequencing and were identified to have medically actionable genetic findings.
Results: Using this workflow, we attempted to re-contact a diverse pilot cohort of 104 nephrology research participants with actionable genetic findings encompassing 34 different monogenic etiologies of nephropathy and five single-gene disorders recommended by the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics for return as medically actionable secondary findings. We successfully re-contacted 64 (62%) participants and returned results to 41 (39%) individuals. In each case, the genetic diagnosis had meaningful implications for the patients’ nephrology care. Through implementation efforts and qualitative interviews with providers, we identified over 20 key challenges associated with returning results to study participants, and found that physician knowledge gaps in genomics was a recurrent theme. We iteratively addressed these challenges to yield an optimized workflow, which included standardized consultation notes with tailored management recommendations, monthly educational conferences on core topics in genomics, and a curated list of expert clinicians for cases requiring extra-nephrologic referrals.
Conclusions: Developing the infrastructure to support return of genetic results in nephrology was resource-intensive, but presented potential opportunities for improving patient care
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Evaluation of the cost and effectiveness of diverse recruitment methods for a genetic screening study
Purpose: Recruitment of participants from diverse backgrounds is crucial to the generalizability of genetic research, but has proven challenging. We retrospectively evaluated recruitment methods used for a study on return of genetic results.
Methods: The costs of study design, development, and participant enrollment were calculated, and the characteristics of the participants enrolled through the seven recruitment methods were examined.
Results: A total of 1118 participants provided consent, a blood sample, and questionnaire data. The estimated cost across recruitment methods ranged from 1666 per participant and required a large recruitment team. Recruitment methods using flyers and staff networks were the most cost-efficient and resulted in the highest completion rate. Targeted sampling that emphasized the importance of Latino/a participation, utilization of translated materials, and in-person recruitments contributed to enrolling a demographically diverse sample.
Conclusions: Although all methods were deployed in the same hospital or neighborhood and shared the same staff, each recruitment method was different in terms of cost and characteristics of the enrolled participants, suggesting the importance of carefully choosing the recruitment methods based on the desired composition of the final study sample. This analysis provides information about the effectiveness and cost of different methods to recruit adults for genetic research
Understanding the Return of Genomic Sequencing Results Process: Content Review of Participant Summary Letters in the eMERGE Research Network
A challenge in returning genomic test results to research participants is how best to communicate complex and clinically nuanced findings to participants in a manner that is scalable to the large numbers of participants enrolled. The purpose of this study was to examine the features of genetic results letters produced at each Electronic Medical Records and Genomics (eMERGE3) Network site to assess their readability and content. Letters were collected from each site, and a qualitative analysis of letter content and a quantitative analysis of readability statistics were performed. Because letters were produced independently at each eMERGE site, significant heterogeneity in readability and content was found. The content of letters varied widely from a baseline of notifying participants that results existed to more detailed information about positive or negative results, as well as materials for sharing with family members. Most letters were significantly above the Centers for Disease Control-suggested reading level for health communication. While continued effort should be applied to make letters easier to understand, the ongoing challenge of explaining complex genomic information, the implications of negative test results, and the uncertainty that comes with some types of test and result makes simplifying letter text challenging
Ethical conflicts in translational genetic research: lessons learned from the eMERGE-III experience
Purpose
The Electronic Medical Records and Genomics (eMERGE) Consortium integrated biorepository-based research with electronic health records (EHR) to return results from large-scale genetic tests to participants and uploaded those data into the EHR. This article explores the ethical issues investigators encountered in that process.
Methods
We conducted in-depth, semistructured interviews with study personnel of the eMERGE-III Consortium sites that returned results.
Results
We discuss major ethical issues that arose while attempting to return research results from the eMERGE Consortium to individual participants. These included difficulties recontacting those participants who had not explicitly consented to such and disclosing results to many participants with insufficient infrastructure and staff. Investigators reported being driven by a supererogatory clinical impulse.
Conclusion
All these issues ultimately derive from ethical conflicts inherent to translational work being done at the interface of research and clinical care. A critical rethinking of this divide is important, but infrastructural support for such work is necessary for an ethically sound rollout of large-scale genetic testing
Inhibitory Effects of Robo2 on Nephrin: A Crosstalk between Positive and Negative Signals Regulating Podocyte Structure
Robo2 is the cell surface receptor for the repulsive guidance cue Slit and is involved in axon guidance and neuronal migration. Nephrin is a podocyte slit-diaphragm protein that functions in the kidney glomerular filtration barrier. Here, we report that Robo2 is expressed at the basal surface of mouse podocytes and colocalizes with nephrin. Biochemical studies indicate that Robo2 forms a complex with nephrin in the kidney through adaptor protein Nck. In contrast to the role of nephrin that promotes actin polymerization, Slit2-Robo2 signaling inhibits nephrin-induced actin polymerization. In addition, the amount of F-actin associated with nephrin is increased in Robo2 knockout mice that develop an altered podocyte foot process structure. Genetic interaction study further reveals that loss of Robo2 alleviates the abnormal podocyte structural phenotype in nephrin null mice. These results suggest that Robo2 signaling acts as a negative regulator on nephrin to influence podocyte foot process architecture
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Ethical Considerations Related to Return of Results from Genomic Medicine Projects: The eMERGE Network (Phase III) Experience
We examined the Institutional Review Board (IRB) process at 9 academic institutions in the electronic Medical Records and Genomics (eMERGE) Network, for proposed electronic health record-based genomic medicine studies, to identify common questions and concerns. Sequencing of 109 disease related genes and genotyping of 14 actionable variants is being performed in ~28,100 participants from the 9 sites. Pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants in actionable genes are being returned to study participants. We examined each site’s research protocols, informed-consent materials, and interactions with IRB staff. Research staff at each site completed questionnaires regarding their IRB interactions. The time to prepare protocols for IRB submission, number of revisions and time to approval ranged from 10–261 days, 0–11, and 11–90 days, respectively. IRB recommendations related to the readability of informed consent materials, specifying the full range of potential risks, providing options for receiving limited results or withdrawal, sharing of information with family members, and establishing the mechanisms to answer participant questions. IRBs reviewing studies that involve the return of results from genomic sequencing have a diverse array of concerns, and anticipating these concerns can help investigators to more effectively engage IRBs
Erratum: Exome-wide Association Study Identifies GREB1L Mutations in Congenital Kidney Malformations (The American Journal of Human Genetics (2017) 101(5) (789–802) (S0002929717303877) (10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.09.018))
(The American Journal of Human Genetics 101, 789–802; November 2, 2017) In the version of this paper originally published, the author's name Anna Materna-Kiryluk was incorrectly hyphenated. It appears correctly here and online. The authors apologize for this error