Back to Search Start Over

The expanding spectrum of COL2A1 gene variants IN 136 patients with a skeletal dysplasia phenotype.

Authors :
Barat-Houari M
Dumont B
Fabre A
Them FT
Alembik Y
Alessandri JL
Amiel J
Audebert S
Baumann-Morel C
Blanchet P
Bieth E
Brechard M
Busa T
Calvas P
Capri Y
Cartault F
Chassaing N
Ciorca V
Coubes C
David A
Delezoide AL
Dupin-Deguine D
El Chehadeh S
Faivre L
Giuliano F
Goldenberg A
Isidor B
Jacquemont ML
Julia S
Kaplan J
Lacombe D
Lebrun M
Marlin S
Martin-Coignard D
Martinovic J
Masurel A
Melki J
Mozelle-Nivoix M
Nguyen K
Odent S
Philip N
Pinson L
Plessis G
Quélin C
Shaeffer E
Sigaudy S
Thauvin C
Till M
Touraine R
Vigneron J
Baujat G
Cormier-Daire V
Le Merrer M
Geneviève D
Touitou I
Source :
European journal of human genetics : EJHG [Eur J Hum Genet] 2016 Jul; Vol. 24 (7), pp. 992-1000. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Dec 02.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Heterozygous COL2A1 variants cause a wide spectrum of skeletal dysplasia termed type II collagenopathies. We assessed the impact of this gene in our French series. A decision tree was applied to select 136 probands (71 Stickler cases, 21 Spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia congenita cases, 11 Kniest dysplasia cases, and 34 other dysplasia cases) before molecular diagnosis by Sanger sequencing. We identified 66 different variants among the 71 positive patients. Among those patients, 18 belonged to multiplex families and 53 were sporadic. Most variants (38/44, 86%) were located in the triple helical domain of the collagen chain and glycine substitutions were mainly observed in severe phenotypes, whereas arginine to cysteine changes were more often encountered in moderate phenotypes. This series of skeletal dysplasia is one of the largest reported so far, adding 44 novel variants (15%) to published data. We have confirmed that about half of our Stickler patients (46%) carried a COL2A1 variant, and that the molecular spectrum was different across the phenotypes. To further address the question of genotype-phenotype correlation, we plan to screen our patients for other candidate genes using a targeted next-generation sequencing approach.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-5438
Volume :
24
Issue :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European journal of human genetics : EJHG
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26626311
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ejhg.2015.250