1. ELMO2 biallelic pathogenic variants in a patient with gingival hypertrophy and cherubism phenotype: Case report and molecular review.
- Author
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Perrone E, Coelho AVC, Virmond LDA, Espolaor JGA, Filho JBO, Nascimento ATBD, Matta MCD, Meira JGC, Cardoso-Júnior LM, Andrade ACM, Chaves RZT, and Acosta AX
- Subjects
- Child, Female, Humans, Male, Alleles, Fibromatosis, Gingival genetics, Fibromatosis, Gingival pathology, Fibromatosis, Gingival diagnosis, Homozygote, Mutation genetics, Phenotype, Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing genetics, Cherubism genetics, Cherubism pathology, Cherubism diagnosis, Gingival Hypertrophy genetics, Gingival Hypertrophy pathology, Cytoskeletal Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Ramon syndrome (OMIM #266270) was first described in a patient with cherubism, gingival fibromatosis, epilepsy, intellectual disability, hypertrichosis, and stunted growth. In 2018, Mehawej et al. described a patient with Ramon syndrome in whom a homozygous variant in ELMO2 was identified, suggesting that this gene may be the causative for this syndrome. ELMO2 biallelic pathogenic variants were also described in patients with a primary intraosseous vascular malformation (PIVM; OMIM #606893). These patients presented gingival bleeding and cherubism phenotype. Herein, a patient with gingival hypertrophy, neurodevelopmental delay, and cherubism phenotype with a novel homozygous predicted loss-of-function (LOF) variant in the ELMO2 gene and family recurrence was reported. A surgical approach to treat gingival bleeding and mandible vascular malformation was also described. Furthermore, this study includes a comprehensive literature review of molecular data regarding the ELMO2 gene. All the variants, except one described in the ELMO2, were predicted as LOF, including our patient's variant. There is an overlapping between PIVM, also caused by LOF biallelic variants in the ELMO2 gene, and Ramon syndrome, which can suggest that they are not different entities. However, due to a limited number of cases described with molecular evaluation, it is hard to establish a genotype-phenotype correlation. Our study supports that LOF pathogenic biallelic variants in the ELMO2 gene cause a phenotype that has cherubism and gingival hypertrophy as main characteristics., (© 2024 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2024
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