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Title: | Renal X-inactivation in female individuals with X-linked Alport syndrome primarily determined by age | Authors: | Günthner, Roman Knipping, Lea Jeruschke, Stefanie Satanoskij, Robin Lorenz-Depiereux, Bettina Hemmer, Clara Braunisch, Matthias C Riedhammer, Korbinian M Ćomić, Jasmina Tönshoff, Burkhard Tasic, Velibor Abazi-Emini, Nora Nushi-Stavileci, Valbona Buiting, Karin Gjorgjievski, Nikola Momirovska, Ana Patzer, Ludwig Kirschstein, Martin Gross, Oliver Lungu, Adrian Weber, Stefanie Renders, Lutz Heemann, Uwe Meitinger, Thomas Büscher, Anja K Hoefele, Julia |
Issue Date: | 2022 | Publisher: | Frontiers Media SA | Journal: | Frontiers in Medicine | Abstract: | X-linked Alport syndrome (AS) caused by hemizygous disease-causing variants in COL4A5 primarily affects males. Females with a heterozygous state show a diverse phenotypic spectrum ranging from microscopic hematuria to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) and extrarenal manifestations. In other X-linked diseases, skewed X-inactivation leads to preferential silencing of one X-chromosome and thus can determine the phenotype in females. We aimed to show a correlation between X-inactivation in blood and urine-derived renal cells and clinical phenotype of females with a heterozygous disease-causing variant in COL4A5 compared to healthy controls. A total of 56 females with a heterozygous disease-causing COL4A5 variant and a mean age of 31.6 ± 18.3 SD years were included in this study. A total of 94% had hematuria, 62% proteinuria >200 mg/day, yet only 7% had decreased eGFR. Using human androgen receptor assay X-inactivation was examined in blood cells of all 56 individuals, in urine-derived cells of 27 of these individuals and in all healthy controls. X-inactivation did not correlate with age of first manifestation, proteinuria or eGFR neither in blood, nor in urine. The degree of X-inactivation showed a moderate association with age, especially in urine-derived cells of the patient cohort (rho = 0.403, p = 0.037). Determination of X-inactivation allelity revealed a shift of X-inactivation toward the COL4A5 variant bearing allele. This is the first study examining X-inactivation of urine-derived cells from female individuals with AS. A correlation between phenotype and X-inactivation could not be observed suspecting other genetic modifiers shaping the phenotype in female individuals with AS. The association of X-inactivation with age in urine-derived cells suggests an escape-mechanism inactivating the COL4A5 variant carrying allele in female individuals with AS. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/24720 | ISSN: | 2296-858X | DOI: | 10.3389/fmed.2022.953643 |
Appears in Collections: | Faculty of Medicine: Journal Articles |
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