Rare genetic disorders affecting the cilium have been discovered. The cilium is characterized by a number of health problems, including common conditions like diabetes, kidney failure, and liver fibrosis.

TOP INSIGHT
The genes involved in the function of the cilium found that the same genes causing its rare diseases might also be behind the appearance of diabetes, kidney failure and liver fibrosis among the general public, too – pointing to a potential way to treat or even cure them.
“Resources like the UK Biobank provide enormous potential to link genes related to rare diseases with common diseases and traits”, said Ritchie.
Using established bioinformatics and genomic techniques, the researchers found that roughly a third of the genes they analyzed – 42 of them – had strong associations with diabetes, kidney failure, liver disease, and high cholesterol levels within blood samples the team examined. They discovered that these associations weren’t just restricted to the rare genetic variants they studied, either, but could be tied to some of the more common ones as well.
“These genes were found to be widely expressed across all human tissues, with our data suggesting that genetically-encoded changes in the degree to which these genes are activated might be behind their involvement in common disease development,” Drivas said. “Our findings challenge the widely-held belief that the cilium is an organelle important mainly in rare genetic syndromes, and suggest that they could also be behind many common diseases that have yet to be cured.”
This discovery opens up the possibility of targeting new drugs, or even gene therapies, for many common conditions. Diabetes, for instance, affected more than 34 million people in the United States, which accounts for more than 10 percent of the population, with many only able to control it via insulin management. New therapies, driven by a patient’s genetics, could provide much more targeted and effective treatment for these individuals.
“Ultimately we hope to use these findings to screen libraries of small molecules to identify drugs that might help modulate ciliary function and which might have the potential to treat some of the diseases we examined in our study,” Drivas said.
“The potential to use this study as a model for how to explore other rare disease genes is exciting,” said Ritchie. “There could be many more genes we think of as causal for rare disease that are also important for common disease risk as well.”
This study was funded in part by the National Institutes of Health (R01 AI077505, GM115318, and AI116794). Drivas is supported in part by the NIH T32 training grant 5T32GM008638-23.
Other authors include Anastasia Lucas and Xinyuan Zhang.
Source-Newswise
MEDINDIA




Email






