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1.
Am J Med Genet A ; 194(2): 368-373, 2024 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37840436

Marfan syndrome (MFS) is an autosomal dominant connective tissue disorder due to pathogenic variants in Fibrillin-1 (FBN1) affecting nearly one in every 10,000 individuals. We report a 16-month-old female with early-onset MFS heterozygous for an 11.2 kb de novo duplication within the FBN1 gene. Tandem location of the duplication was further confirmed by optical genome mapping in addition to genetic sequencing and chromosomal microarray. This is the third reported case of a large multi-exon duplication in FBN1, and the only one confirmed to be in tandem. As the vast majority of pathogenic variants associated with MFS are point mutations, this expands the landscape of known FBN1 pathogenic variants and supports consistent use of genetic testing strategies that can detect large, indel-type variants.


Marfan Syndrome , Humans , Female , Infant , Fibrillin-1/genetics , Mutation , Marfan Syndrome/diagnosis , Marfan Syndrome/genetics , Marfan Syndrome/pathology , Genetic Testing , Point Mutation , Fibrillins/genetics , Adipokines/genetics
2.
Am J Hum Genet ; 101(1): 139-148, 2017 Jul 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28686853

We report 15 individuals with de novo pathogenic variants in WDR26. Eleven of the individuals carry loss-of-function mutations, and four harbor missense substitutions. These 15 individuals comprise ten females and five males, and all have intellectual disability with delayed speech, a history of febrile and/or non-febrile seizures, and a wide-based, spastic, and/or stiff-legged gait. These subjects share a set of common facial features that include a prominent maxilla and upper lip that readily reveal the upper gingiva, widely spaced teeth, and a broad nasal tip. Together, these features comprise a recognizable facial phenotype. We compared these features with those of chromosome 1q41q42 microdeletion syndrome, which typically contains WDR26, and noted that clinical features are consistent between the two subsets, suggesting that haploinsufficiency of WDR26 contributes to the pathology of 1q41q42 microdeletion syndrome. Consistent with this, WDR26 loss-of-function single-nucleotide mutations identified in these subjects lead to nonsense-mediated decay with subsequent reduction of RNA expression and protein levels. We derived a structural model of WDR26 and note that missense variants identified in these individuals localize to highly conserved residues of this WD-40-repeat-containing protein. Given that WDR26 mutations have been identified in ∼1 in 2,000 of subjects in our clinical cohorts and that WDR26 might be poorly annotated in exome variant-interpretation pipelines, we would anticipate that this disorder could be more common than currently appreciated.


Facies , Gait/genetics , Haploinsufficiency/genetics , Intellectual Disability/genetics , Proteins/genetics , Seizures/genetics , Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing , Amino Acid Sequence , Base Sequence , Child, Preschool , Chromosome Deletion , Female , Growth and Development/genetics , Humans , Intellectual Disability/complications , Male , Mutation/genetics , Proteins/chemistry , RNA Stability/genetics , Seizures/complications , Syndrome
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