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Maternal Vitamin A Status as a Risk Factor of Hirschsprung Disease in the Child.

Groups and Associations Hegde, Shalini G.; Devi, Sarita; Sivadas, Ambily; Shubha, Attibele Mahadevaiah; Thomas, Annamma; Mukhopadhyay, Arpita; Kurpad, Anura V.
Clinical and translational gastroenterology 2023

INTRODUCTION: The gene-environment interaction of the REarranged during Transfection ( RET ) gene with vitamin A in the etiopathogenesis of Hirschsprung  disease (HSCR) has been suggested in rodents. The aim of this study was to  evaluate vitamin A status in mothers of children with HSCR and to assess its  association with pathogenic variants of the RET gene in affected children.  METHODS: This was a case-control study of stable isotope-based vitamin A  measurement stores of mothers of children diagnosed with HSCR (within 8 months  from birth, n = 7) and age-matched mothers of normal children (n = 6).  Next-generation sequencing of RET exons, along with their upstream promoter  region, was performed in the 7 HSCR proband-parent triads to evaluate pathogenic  variants. RESULTS: Maternal vitamin A stores in the HSCR group was almost 50%  that of those in controls, tending toward significance (0.50 ± 0.17 vs 0.89 ±  0.51 μmol/g respectively, P = 0.079). Two novel pathogenic de novo mutations were  identified in 2 cases, and a rare single-nucleotide deletion was detected in the  3.5-kb RET upstream region, in a heterozygous state, in all 7 proband-parent  triads. Low-penetrance RET haplotypes associated with HSCR were detected in 5  cases. DISCUSSION: Mothers with children with HSCR had lower vitamin A liver  stores than mothers with normal children, and the children who were affected had  HSCR despite having no established pathogenic RET variants. Lower maternal  vitamin A status may increase the penetrance of genetic mutations in RET , and  vitamin-A mediated gene-environment interactions may underpin some of the  etiology of HSCR.