Logo image
A Genome-Wide Investigation of Copy Number Variation in Patients with Sporadic Brain Arteriovenous Malformation
Journal article

A Genome-Wide Investigation of Copy Number Variation in Patients with Sporadic Brain Arteriovenous Malformation

Nasrine Bendjilali, Helen Kim, Shantel Weinsheimer, Diana E Guo, Pui-Yan Kwok, Jonathan G Zaroff, Stephen Sidney, Michael T Lawton, Charles E McCulloch, Bobby PC Koeleman, …
PLOS ONE, Vol.8(10)
01/01/2013

Abstract

2.1 Biological and endogenous factors (hrcs-rac) 31 Biological Sciences (for-2020) 3105 Genetics (for-2020) 32 Biomedical and Clinical Sciences (for-2020) Adult (mesh) Algorithms (mesh) Brain Disorders (rcdc) Clinical Research (rcdc) Congenital Structural Anomalies (rcdc) DNA Copy Number Variations (mesh) Female (mesh) Gene Ontology (mesh) General Science & Technology (science-metrix) Genetics (rcdc) Genome-Wide Association Study (mesh) Human Genome (rcdc) Humans (mesh) Intracranial Arteriovenous Malformations (mesh) Male (mesh) Middle Aged (mesh) Molecular Sequence Annotation (mesh) Neurosciences (rcdc) Pediatric (rcdc) Rare Diseases (rcdc) Reproducibility of Results (mesh)
BACKGROUND: Brain arteriovenous malformations (BAVM) are clusters of abnormal blood vessels, with shunting of blood from the arterial to venous circulation and a high risk of rupture and intracranial hemorrhage. Most BAVMs are sporadic, but also occur in patients with Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia, a Mendelian disorder caused by mutations in genes in the transforming growth factor beta (TGFβ) signaling pathway. METHODS: To investigate whether copy number variations (CNVs) contribute to risk of sporadic BAVM, we performed a genome-wide association study in 371 sporadic BAVM cases and 563 healthy controls, all Caucasian. Cases and controls were genotyped using the Affymetrix 6.0 array. CNVs were called using the PennCNV and Birdsuite algorithms and analyzed via segment-based and gene-based approaches. Common and rare CNVs were evaluated for association with BAVM. RESULTS: A CNV region on 1p36.13, containing the neuroblastoma breakpoint family, member 1 gene (NBPF1), was significantly enriched with duplications in BAVM cases compared to controls (P = 2.2×10(-9)); NBPF1 was also significantly associated with BAVM in gene-based analysis using both PennCNV and Birdsuite. We experimentally validated the 1p36.13 duplication; however, the association did not replicate in an independent cohort of 184 sporadic BAVM cases and 182 controls (OR = 0.81, P = 0.8). Rare CNV analysis did not identify genes significantly associated with BAVM. CONCLUSION: We did not identify common CNVs associated with sporadic BAVM that replicated in an independent cohort. Replication in larger cohorts is required to elucidate the possible role of common or rare CNVs in BAVM pathogenesis.

Metrics

1 Record Views

Details

Logo image