4.7 Article

Short-Rib Polydactyly and Jeune Syndromes Are Caused by Mutations in WDR60

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 93, Issue 3, Pages 515-523

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2013.06.022

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Cancer Research Foundation
  2. UQ International PhD Scholarship
  3. NHMRC Senior Principal Research Fellowship
  4. Rebecca Cooper Medical Research Foundation
  5. EU FP-7 framework programme (SYSCILIA grant)
  6. Dutch Kidney Foundation [CP 11.18]
  7. Wellcome Trust
  8. British Heart Foundation
  9. Action Medical Research UK
  10. Newlife Foundation for Disabled Children UK
  11. Henry Smith Charity UK
  12. Action Medical Research UK Clinical Training Fellowship [RTF-1411]
  13. Wellcome Trust UK [UK10K, WT091310]
  14. Action Medical Research [1794] Funding Source: researchfish
  15. Great Ormond Street Hospital Childrens Charity [V1299] Funding Source: researchfish
  16. National Institute for Health Research [NF-SI-0510-10268] Funding Source: researchfish

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Short-rib polydactyly syndromes (SRPS I-V) are a group of lethal congenital disorders characterized by shortening of the ribs and long bones, polydactyly, and a range of extraskeletal phenotypes. A number of other disorders in this grouping, including Jeune and Ellis-van Creveld syndromes, have an overlapping but generally milder phenotype. Collectively, these short-rib dysplasias (with or without polydactyly) share a common underlying defect in primary cilium function and form a subset of the ciliopathy disease spectrum. By using whole-exome capture and massive parallel sequencing of DNA from an affected Australian individual with SRPS type III, we detected two novel heterozygous mutations in WDR60, a relatively uncharacterized gene. These mutations segregated appropriately in the unaffected parents and another affected family member, confirming compound heterozygosity, and both were predicted to have a damaging effect on the protein. Analysis of an additional 54 skeletal ciliopathy exomes identified compound heterozygous mutations in WDR60 in a Spanish individual with Jeune syndrome of relatively mild presentation. Of note, these two families share one novel WDR60 missense mutation, although haplotype analysis suggested no shared ancestry. We further show that WDR60 localizes at the base of the primary cilium in wild-type human chondrocytes, and analysis of fibroblasts from affected individuals revealed a defect in ciliogenesis and aberrant accumulation of the GLI2 transcription factor at the centrosorne or basal body in the absence of an obvious axoneme. These findings show that WDR60 mutations can cause skeletal ciliopathies and suggest a role for WDR60 in ciliogenesis.

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