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CTCF deletion syndrome: clinical features and epigenetic delineation.

Authors :
Ikumi Hori
Rie Kawamura
Kazuhiko Nakabayashi
Hidetaka Watanabe
Ken Higashimoto
Junko Tomikawa
Daisuke ieda
Kei Ohashi
Yutaka Negishi
Ayako Hattori
Yoshitsugu Sugio
Keiko Wakui
Kenichiro Hata
Hidenobu Soejima
Kenji Kurosawa
Shinji Saitoh
Source :
Journal of Medical Genetics; Dec2017, Vol. 54 Issue 12, p836-842, 7p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Heterozygous mutations in CTCF have been reported in patients with distinct clinical features including intellectual disability. However, the precise pathomechanism underlying the phenotype remains to be uncovered, partly because of the diverse function of CTCF. Here we describe extensive clinical and genetic investigation for two patients with a microdeletion encompassing CTCF. METHODS: We performed genetic examination including comprehensive investigation of X chromosome inactivation and DNA methylation profiling at imprinted loci and genome-wide. RESULTS: Two patients showed comparable clinical features to those in a previous report, indicating that haploinsufficiency of CTCF was the major determinant of the microdeletion syndrome. Despite the haploinsufficiency of CTCF, X chromosome inactivation was normal. DNA methylation at imprinted loci was normal, but hypermethylation at CTCF binding sites was demonstrated, of which PRKCZ and FGFR2 were identified as candidate genes. CONCLUSIONS: This study confirms that haploinsufficiency of CTCF causes distinct clinical features, and that a microdeletion encompassing CTCF could cause a recognisable CTCF deletion syndrome. Perturbed DNA methylation at CTCF binding sites, not at imprinted loci, may underlie the pathomechanism of the syndrome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00222593
Volume :
54
Issue :
12
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Medical Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
126436318
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/jmedgenet-2017-104854