Association of BMPR1A polymorphism, but not BMP4, with kidney size in full-term newborns

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Abstract

Background: A correlation between renal mass and nephron number in newborns allows the use of total kidney volume at birth as a surrogate for congenital nephron number. As the bone morphogenetic protein type 4 (BMP4), and its receptor type 1A (BMPR1A, ALK3), play an important role in renal development, we hypothesized that common, functional polymorphisms in their genes might be responsible for variation in kidney size among healthy individuals. Methods: We recruited 179 healthy full-term newborns born to healthy women. Kidney volume was measured sonographically. Total kidney volume (TKV) was calculated as the sum of left and right kidneys, and normalized for body surface area (TKV/BSA). Genomic DNA was extracted from umbilical cord blood leukocytes, and c.455T > C (rs17563) BMP4 and c.67 + 5659A > T (rs7922846) BMPR1A genotypes were identified by PCR-RFLP. Results: TKV/BSA in newborns carrying at least one A BMPR1A allele (AA + AT) was significantly reduced by approximately 13 % as compared with TT homozygous newborns (106.7 ± 21.5 ml/m2 vs. 122.7 ± 43.8 ml/m2, p < 0.02). No significant differences in TKV/BSA were found among newborns with different BMP4 genotypes. Conclusions: Results suggest that rs7922846 BMPR1A polymorphism may account for subtle variation in kidney size at birth, reflecting congenital nephron endowment. © 2012 The Author(s).

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Kaczmarczyk, M., Goracy, I., Loniewska, B., Kuprjanowicz, A., Binczak-Kuleta, A., Clark, J. S., & Ciechanowicz, A. (2013). Association of BMPR1A polymorphism, but not BMP4, with kidney size in full-term newborns. Pediatric Nephrology, 28(3), 433–438. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00467-012-2277-7

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