Description
The NOD2 c.3019dupC (p.Leu1007fs) variant was identified in population-based control studies and family studies, showing an elevated risk of Crohn’s Disease compared to the general population (PMID: 21548950, 15024686, 18489434, 11425413, 11385576, 11385577, 11910337, 12019468, 15190267, 15571588) (ClinVar entry by Invitae, Accession: SCV000636103.6). A large meta-analysis of 75 case-control studies suggests the odds ratio for Crohn’s disease to be 3.8 for carriers of the variant (95% CI 3.4-4.3) (ID: 19713276) (ClinVar entry by Invitae, Accession: SCV000636103.6). Schnitzler et al. characterized the NOD2 genotype of 1066 patients with Crohn’s Disease, identifying 54 individuals homozygous for the p.Leu1007fs variant, 153 heterozygotes, and 25 compound heterozygotes (freq: 13.4%). The variant was present at a significantly higher frequency in individuals with aggressive disease (15.6%) compared to those with mild disease (8.2%) (p = 2.6 x 10-5). Of the 54 individuals homozygous for the variant, 100% had ileal disease, compared to 82% of NOD2 wild-type carriers (p<0.0001). In combination with active smoking, homozygosity for this variant is associated with 100% risk for developing ileal stenosis requiring Crohn’s Disease-related surgical intervention (Schnitzler_2020_PMID: 32716958). The variant was also identified in dbSNP (ID: rs2066847) and ClinVar (classified as uncertain and likely benign in association with Yao Syndrome by Mendelics and Illumina, respectively, classified as likely benign and an increased risk allele in association with Crohn Disease by Illumina and Invitae, respectively, classified as likely benign in association with Inflammatory Bowel Disease 1; Blau Syndrome by ARUP Laboratories, and benign by University Medical Center Groningen) databases. The variant was identified in control databases in 4,298 of 282,762 chromosomes (115 homozygous) at a frequency of 1.52%, and was observed at the highest frequency in the Ashkenazi Jewish population in 355 of 10,364 chromosomes (freq: 3.43%) (Genome Aggregation Database March 6, 2019, v2.1.1). Functional studies have shown the variant causes reduced cytokine production upon exposure to bacteria, but is capable of inducing T-cell polarization (ID: 18240302), reduced NFkB activity, reduced response to lipopolysaccharide and peptidoglycan (PMID: 12512038, 15198989), and impaired membrane association and signaling response upon stimulation of synthetic immunoreactive peptides (PMID: 26500656, 22684479, 21335489) (ClinVar entry by Invitae, Accession: SCV000636103.6). The c.3019dupC variant occurs within 50 base pairs of the penultimate exon-exon junction. Variants in this region may escape non-sense mediated RNA decay, therefore the clinical significance of this variant cannot be determined with certainty at this time. In summary, based on the above information the clinical significance of this variant cannot be determined with certainty at this time. This variant is classified as a variant of uncertain significance. However, this variant may act as a risk factor for Crohn’s Disease.
# | Sample | Method | Observation |
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Origin | Affected | Number tested | Tissue | Purpose | Method | Individuals | Allele frequency | Families | Co-occurrences |
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1 | unknown | unknown | not provided | not provided | not provided | | not provided | not provided | not provided | not provided |