Login / Signup

A 3000-year-old founder variant in the DRC1 gene causes primary ciliary dyskinesia in Japan and Korea.

Ryotaro HashizumeYifei XuMakoto IkejiriShimpei GotohKazuhiko Takeuchi
Published in: Journal of human genetics (2024)
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a genetic disorder characterized by ciliary structural abnormalities and dysfunction, leading to chronic rhinosinusitis, otitis media with effusion, bronchiectasis, and infertility. Approximately half of Japanese PCD cases are attributed to variants in the dynein regulatory complex subunit 1 (DRC1) gene, predominantly featuring homogeneous deletions of exons 1-4 spanning 27,748 base pairs on chromosome 2. Here, we report 10 new PCD cases (9 families) in addition to 29 previously reported cases (24 families) caused by DRC1 variants. Among these 39 cases, biallelic DRC1 exon 1-4 deletions were detected in 38 (97.4%). These DRC1 deletions exhibited an identical breakpoint in all PCD cases in the Japanese and Korean populations, strongly suggesting a founder effect. In this study, we performed haplotype analysis, using a whole-exome sequencing dataset of 18 Japanese PCD patients harboring large biallelic DRC1 deletions. We estimated that the founder allele likely emerged 115.1 generations ago (95% confidence interval: 33.7-205.1), suggesting an origin of approximately 3050 years ago, coinciding with the transition from the Jomon period to the early Yayoi period in Japan. Considering the formation of the modern Japanese population, the founder with the DRC1 exon 1-4 deletion likely lived on the Korean peninsula, with the allele later transmitted to Japan through migration. This study provides insights into the origin of the DRC1 copy number variant, the most frequent PCD variant in the Japanese and Korean populations, highlighting the importance of understanding population-specific genetic variations in the context of human migration and disease prevalence.
Keyphrases