4.5 Article

DIAPH1 Variants in Non-East Asian Patients With Sporadic Moyamoya Disease

Journal

JAMA NEUROLOGY
Volume 78, Issue 8, Pages 993-1003

Publisher

AMER MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2021.1681

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Yale-NIH Center for Mendelian Genomics [5U54HG006504]
  2. University of Washington Center for Mendelian Genomics [UM1HG006493, U24HG008956]
  3. National Institutes of Health [R01 NS111029-01A1, R01 NS109358, K12 228168]
  4. Rudi Schulte Research Institute
  5. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [R00HL143036-02]
  6. NIH [R01HL109942]
  7. American Heart Association Merit Award
  8. American Heart Association Postdoctoral Fellowship Award [18POST34020031]

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A genetic association study identified rare damaging variants associated with Moyamoya disease (MMD) risk, suggesting DIAPH1 as a novel MMD risk gene and highlighting the importance of impaired vascular cell actin remodeling in MMD pathogenesis for diagnostic and therapeutic implications.
IMPORTANCE Moyamoya disease (MMD), a progressive vasculopathy leading to narrowing and ultimate occlusion of the intracranial internal carotid arteries, is a cause of childhood stroke. The cause of MMD is poorly understood, but genetic factors play a role. Several familial forms of MMD have been identified, but the cause of most cases remains elusive, especially among non-East Asian individuals. OBJECTIVE To assess whether ultrarare de novo and rare, damaging transmitted variants with large effect sizes are associated with MMD risk. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A genetic association study was conducted using whole-exome sequencing case-parent MMD trios in a small discovery cohort collected over 3.5 years (2016-2019); data were analyzed in 2020. Medical records from US hospitals spanning a range of 1 month to 1.5 years were reviewed for phenotyping. Exomes from a larger validation cohort were analyzed to identify additional rare, large-effect variants in the top candidate gene. Participants included patients with MMD and, when available, their parents. All participants who met criteria and were presented with the option to join the study agreed to do so; none were excluded. Twenty-four probands (22 trios and 2 singletons) composed the discovery cohort, and 84 probands (29 trios and 55 singletons) composed the validation cohort. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Gene variants were identified and filtered using stringent criteria. Enrichment and case-control tests assessed gene-level variant burden. In silico modeling estimated the probability of variant association with protein structure. Integrative genomics assessed expression patterns of MMD risk genes derived from single-cell RNA sequencing data of human and mouse brain tissue. RESULTS Of the 24 patients in the discovery cohort, 14 (58.3%) were men and 18 (75.0%) were of European ancestry. Three of 24 discovery cohort probands contained 2 do novo (1-tailed Poisson P = 1.1 x 10(-6)) and 1 rare, transmitted damaging variant (12.5% of cases) in DIAPH1 (mammalian diaphanous-1), a key regulator of actin remodeling in vascular cells and platelets. Four additional ultrarare damaging heterozygous DIAPH1 variants (3 unphased) were identified in 3 other patients in an 84-proband validation cohort (73.8% female, 77.4% European). All 6 patients were non-East Asian. Compound heterozygous variants were identified in ena/vasodilator-stimulated phosphoproteinlike protein EVL, a mammalian diaphanous-1 interactor that regulates actin polymerization. DIAPH1 and EVL mutant probands had severe, bilateral MMD associated with transfusion-dependent thrombocytopenia. DIAPH1 and other MMD risk genes are enriched in mural cells of midgestational human brain. The DIAPH1 coexpression network converges in vascular cell actin cytoskeleton regulatory pathways. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE These findings provide the largest collection to date of non-East Asian individuals with sporadic MMD harboring pathogenic variants in the same gene. The results suggest that DIAPH1 is a novel MMD risk gene and impaired vascular cell actin remodeling in MMD pathogenesis, with diagnostic and therapeutic ramifications.

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