Toggle Main Menu Toggle Search

Open Access padlockePrints

Primary, nonsyndromic vesicoureteric reflux and its nephropathy is genetically heterogeneous, with a locus on chromosome 1

Lookup NU author(s): Professor Tim Goodship, Professor Judith Goodship

Downloads

Full text for this publication is not currently held within this repository. Alternative links are provided below where available.


Abstract

Primary vesicoureteric reflux (VUR) affects 1%-2% of whites, and reflux nephropathy (RN) causes up to 15% of end-stage renal failure in children and adults. There is a 30-50-fold increased incidence of VUR in first-degree relatives of probands, compared with the general population. We report the results of the first genomewide search of VUR and RN; we studied seven European families whose members exhibit apparently dominant inheritance. We initially typed 387 polymorphic markers spaced, on average, at 10 cM throughout the genome; we used the GENEHUNTER program to provide parametric and nonparametric linkage analyses of affected individuals. The most positive locus spanned 20 cM on 1p13 between GATA176C01 and D1S1653 and had a nonparametric LOD score (NPL) of 5.76 (P = .0002) and a parametric LOD score of 3.16. Saturation with markers at 1-cM intervals increased the NPL to 5.94 (P = .00009). Hence, VUR maps to a locus on chromosome 1. There was evidence of genetic heterogeneity at the chromosome 1 locus, and 12 additional loci were identified genomewide, with P < .05. No significant linkage was found to 6p, where a renal and ureteric malformation locus has been reported, or to PAX2, mutations of which cause VUR in renal-coloboma syndrome. Our results support the hypothesis that VUR is a genetic disorder.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Goodship JA; Goodship THJ; Feather SA; Carter J; Warwicker P; Malcolm S; Woolf AS; Wright V; Blaydon D; Reid CJD; Flinter FA; Proesmans W; Devriendt K

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: American Journal of Human Genetics

Year: 2000

Volume: 66

Issue: 4

Pages: 1420-1425

ISSN (print): 0002-9297

ISSN (electronic): 1537-6605

Publisher: Cell Press

URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/302864

DOI: 10.1086/302864

PubMed id: 10739767


Altmetrics

Altmetrics provided by Altmetric


Share