Contribution of SLC22A12 on hypouricemia and its clinical significance for screening purposes

Author:

Cha Do Hyeon,Gee Heon YungORCID,Cachau Raul,Choi Jong Mun,Park DaeuiORCID,Jee Sun Ha,Ryu Seungho,Kim Kyeong Kyu,Won Hong-Hee,Limou Sophie,Myung Woojae,Winkler Cheryl A.,Cho Sung KweonORCID

Abstract

Abstract Differentiating between inherited renal hypouricemia and transient hypouricemic status is challenging. Here, we aimed to describe the genetic background of hypouricemia patients using whole-exome sequencing (WES) and assess the feasibility for genetic diagnosis using two founder variants in primary screening. We selected all cases (N = 31) with extreme hypouricemia (<1.3 mg/dl) from a Korean urban cohort of 179,381 subjects without underlying conditions. WES and corresponding downstream analyses were performed for the discovery of rare causal variants for hypouricemia. Two known recessive variants within SLC22A12 (p.Trp258*, pArg90His) were identified in 24 out of 31 subjects (77.4%). In an independent cohort, we identified 50 individuals with hypouricemia and genotyped the p.Trp258* and p.Arg90His variants; 47 of the 50 (94%) hypouricemia cases were explained by only two mutations. Four novel coding variants in SLC22A12, p.Asn136Lys, p.Thr225Lys, p.Arg284Gln, and p.Glu429Lys, were additionally identified. In silico studies predict these as pathogenic variants. This is the first study to show the value of genetic diagnostic screening for hypouricemia in the clinical setting. Screening of just two ethnic-specific variants (p.Trp258* and p.Arg90His) identified 87.7% (71/81) of Korean patients with monogenic hypouricemia. Early genetic identification of constitutive hypouricemia may prevent acute kidney injury by avoidance of dehydration and excessive exercise.

Funder

National Research Foundation of Korea

Ministry of Health, Welfare and Family Affairs | Korea National Institute of Health

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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