Creator(s)

Shannon M. Vandriel
Li-Ting Li
Huiyu She
Jian-She Wang
Kathleen M. Loomes
David A. Piccoli
Irena Jankowska
Piotr Czubkowski
Dorota Gliwicz-Miedzińska
Lorenzo D'Antiga
Emanuele Nicastro
Florence Lacaille
Dominique Debray
Étienne M. Sokal
Tanguy Demaret
Rima L. Fawaz
Silvia Nastasio
Kyung Mo Kim
Seak Hee Oh
Björn Fischler
Henrik Arnell
Catherine Larson-Nath
Winita Hardikar
Sahana Shankar
Shikha S. Sundaram
Alexander Chaidez
Pinar Bulut
Pier Luigi Calvo
Mureo Kasahara
Niviann Blondet
Eberhard Lurz
Anna-Maria Kavallar
Emmanuel M. Gonzales
Emmanuel Jacquemin
Jérôme Bouligand
Noelle H. Ebel
Jeffrey A. Feinstein
Susan M. Siew
Michael O. Stormon
Saul J. Karpen
Rene Romero
M Kyle Jensen
Catalina Jaramillo
James E. Squires
Sarah M. Bedoyan
Deirdre A. Kelly
Jane Hartley
Henkjan J. Verkade
Way Seah Lee
Chatmanee Lertudomphonwanit
Ryan T. Fischer, Children's Mercy HospitalFollow
Henry C. Lin
Nathalie Rock
Yael Mozer-Glassberg
Amin J. Roberts
Helen M. Evans
Wikrom Karnsakul
Gabriella Nebbia
Victorien M. Wolters
Pamela L. Valentino
Jesus Quintero Bernabeu
Amal A. Aqul
Cigdem Arikan
María Legarda Tamara
Cristina Molera Busoms
Thomas Damgaard Sandahl
Giuseppe Indolfi
Andréanne N. Zizzo
Aglaia Zellos
Ruben E. Quiros-Tejeira
Ermelinda Santos-Silva
Kathleen B. Schwarz
Jernej Brecelj
Maria Camila Sanchez
Maria Lorena Cavalieri
Christos Tzivinikos
Sabina Wiecek
John Eshun
Nanda Kerkar
Quais Mujawar
Zerrin Önal
Cristina Gonçalves
Jennifer Garcia
Seema Alam
Carolina Jimenez-Rivera
Luis Bujanda
Richard J. Thompson
Bettina E. Hansen
Nancy B. Spinner
Melissa A. Gilbert
Binita M. Kamath
Global ALagille Alliance (GALA) Study Group

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

9-2025

Identifier

DOI: 10.1111/liv.70251; PMCID: PMC12312628

Abstract

BACKGROUND & AIMS: Alagille syndrome (ALGS) is a rare, autosomal dominant disorder with high phenotypic heterogeneity. Disease-causing variants are primarily identified in Jagged1 (JAG1), with fewer reported in NOTCH2. JAG1 variants cause disease through a mechanism of haploinsufficiency, but the mechanism for NOTCH2 variants is not completely understood, making classification of variants more challenging. Using a large, international patient cohort acquired through the Global ALagille Alliance (GALA) study, we sought to improve classification of NOTCH2 variants and study phenotypic differences between NOTCH2- and JAG1-related disease.

METHODS: Clinical and molecular data from 952 individuals with ALGS in GALA were analysed and disease features compared between those with JAG1 (n = 902) and NOTCH2 (n = 34) variants. Previously reported and newly identified NOTCH2 variants were reinterpreted based on disease-specific modifications to the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) guidelines. The Kaplan-Meier method was utilised to assess native liver survival (NLS) and overall survival (OS) and gene comparisons were made with the log-rank test.

RESULTS: Thirty NOTCH2 variants, including 18 novel variants, were identified and classified in our GALA cohort. Phenotypic analyses revealed a significantly lower incidence of characteristic facies, posterior embryotoxon, cardiac involvement and butterfly vertebrae in individuals with NOTCH2 variants compared to those with JAG1 variants (p <  0.001). No differences were identified in NLS or OS. Review of 61 previously reported NOTCH2 variants resulted in the re-classification of 19 likely pathogenic or pathogenic to VOUS (31.1%) with less than half retaining their originally published classification (34.4%; n = 21).

CONCLUSIONS: We report on a large global study on NOTCH2 genetics and phenotype, which increases the number of reported NOTCH2 variants by 30%. All variants were reclassified using current guidelines, and comparison of the JAG1 and NOTCH2 cohorts demonstrates clear phenotypic divergence between these groups. These data suggest that reliance on classical clinical phenotyping may miss patients with NOTCH2-related disease and supports an inclusive approach to genetic testing.

Journal Title

Liver international : official journal of the International Association for the Study of the Liver

Volume

45

Issue

9

First Page

70251

Last Page

70251

MeSH Keywords

Humans; Alagille Syndrome; Receptor, Notch2; Jagged-1 Protein; Phenotype; Female; Male; Child, Preschool; Infant; Adult; Child; Adolescent; Young Adult; Genetic Variation

PubMed ID

40742203

Keywords

Alagille syndrome; NOTCH2; cholestasis; genetics

Comments

Grants and funding

This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non-commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.

Publisher's Link: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/liv.70251

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