Targeted resequencing identifies PTCH1 as a major contributor to ocular developmental anomalies and extends the SOX2 regulatory network
- Nicolas Chassaing1,14,
- Erica E Davis2,
- Kelly L McKnight2,
- Adrienne R Niederriter2,
- Alexandre Causse1,
- Véronique David3,
- Annaïck Desmaison4,
- Sophie Lamarre5,
- Catherine Vincent-Delorme6,
- Laurent Pasquier7,
- Christine Coubes8,
- Didier Lacombe9,
- Massimiliano Rossi10,
- Jean-Louis Dufier11,
- Helene Dollfus12,
- Josseline Kaplan11,
- Nicholas Katsanis2,
- Heather C Etchevers13,
- Stanislas Faguer1 and
- Patrick Calvas1
- 1 CHU Toulouse;
- 2 Duke University Medical Center;
- 3 CNRS UMR6290, Université de Rennes 1;
- 4 Université Paul-Sabatier Toulouse III, EA-4555;
- 5 INRA, UMR792;
- 6 CHU Lille;
- 7 CHU Rennes;
- 8 CHU Montpellier;
- 9 CHU Bordeaux;
- 10 CHU Lyon;
- 11 Hôpital Necker enfants Malades;
- 12 CHU Strasbourg;
- 13 UMR_S910, Aix-Marseille University
- ↵* Corresponding author; email: chassaing.n{at}chu-toulouse.fr
Abstract
Ocular developmental anomalies (ODA) such as Anophthalmia/Microphthalmia (AM) or anterior segment dysgenesis (ASD) have an estimated combined prevalence of 3.7 in 10,000 births. Mutations in SOX2 are the most frequent contributors to severe ODA, yet account for a minority of the genetic drivers. To identify novel ODA loci, we conducted targeted high-throughput sequencing of 407 candidate genes in an initial cohort of 22 sporadic ODA patients. Patched 1 (PTCH1), an inhibitor of sonic hedgehog (SHH) signaling, harbored an enrichment of rare heterozygous variants in comparison to either controls, or to the other candidate genes (four missense and one frameshift); targeted resequencing of PTCH1 in a second cohort of 48 ODA patients identified two additional rare nonsynonymous changes. Using multiple transient models and a CRISPR/Cas9 mutant, we show physiologically relevant phenotypes altering SHH signaling and eye development upon abrogation of ptch1 in zebrafish which in vivo complementation assays using these models showed that all six patient missense mutations affect SHH signaling. Finally, through transcriptomic and ChIP analyses, we show that SOX2 binds to an intronic domain of the PTCH1 locus to regulate PTCH1 expression, findings that were validated both in vitro and in vivo. Together, these results demonstrate that PTCH1 mutations contribute to as much as 10% of ODA, identify the SHH signaling pathway as a novel effector of SOX2 activity during human ocular development, and indicate that ODA is likely the result of overactive SHH signaling in humans harboring mutations in either PTCH1 or SOX2.
- Received June 19, 2015.
- Accepted February 4, 2016.
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
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