MLL2 mutation detection in 86 patients with Kabuki syndrome: a genotype-phenotype study.


Autoria(s): Makrythanasis P.; van Bon B.; Steehouwer M.; Rodríguez-Santiago B.; Simpson M.; Dias P.; Anderlid B.; Arts P.; Bhat M.; Augello B.; Biamino E.; Bongers E.; Del Campo M.; Cordeiro I.; Cueto-González A.; Cuscó I.; Deshpande C.; Frysira E.; Izatt L.; Flores R.; Galán E.; Gener B.; Gilissen C.; Granneman S.; Hoyer J.; Yntema H.; Kets C.; Koolen D.; Marcelis C.; Medeira A.; Micale L.; Mohammed S.; de Munnik S.; Nordgren A.; Psoni S.; Reardon W.; Revencu N.; Roscioli T.; Ruiterkamp-Versteeg M.; Santos H.; Schoumans J.; Schuurs-Hoeijmakers J.; Silengo M.; Toledo L.; Vendrell T.; van der Burgt I.; van Lier B.; Zweier C.; Reymond A.; Trembath R.; Perez-Jurado L.; Dupont J.; de Vries B.; Brunner H.; Veltman J.; Merla G.; Antonarakis S.; Hoischen A.
Data(s)

2013

Resumo

Recently, pathogenic variants in the MLL2 gene were identified as the most common cause of Kabuki (Niikawa-Kuroki) syndrome (MIM#147920). To further elucidate the genotype-phenotype correlation, we studied a large cohort of 86 clinically defined patients with Kabuki syndrome (KS) for mutations in MLL2. All patients were assessed using a standardized phenotype list and all were scored using a newly developed clinical score list for KS (MLL2-Kabuki score 0-10). Sequencing of the full coding region and intron-exon boundaries of MLL2 identified a total of 45 likely pathogenic mutations (52%): 31 nonsense, 10 missense and four splice-site mutations, 34 of which were novel. In five additional patients, novel, i.e. non-dbSNP132 variants of clinically unknown relevance, were identified. Patients with likely pathogenic nonsense or missense MLL2 mutations were usually more severely affected (median 'MLL2-Kabuki score' of 6) as compared to the patients without MLL2 mutations (median 'MLL2-Kabuki score' of 5), a significant difference (p < 0.0014). Several typical facial features such as large dysplastic ears, arched eyebrows with sparse lateral third, blue sclerae, a flat nasal tip with a broad nasal root, and a thin upper and a full lower lip were observed more often in mutation positive patients.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_F7CFC1017987

isbn:1399-0004 (Electronic)

pmid:23320472

doi:10.1111/cge.12081

isiid:000330092900004

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Clinical Genetics, vol. 84, no. 6, pp. 539-545

Palavras-Chave #genotype-phenotype correlation; Kabuki syndrome; MLL2; Niikawa-Kuroki syndrome
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article