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Expanding the phenotype of CRB2 mutations - A new ciliopathy syndrome?

Authors :
Ranit Jaron
Reeval Segel
Liran Carmel
Ephrat Levy-Lahad
Paul Renbaum
Fouad Zahdeh
Victoria Doviner
Nuphar Rosenfeld
E. Picard
Shai Carmi
Sharon Zeligson
Liana Beni-Adani
Source :
Clinical Genetics. 90:540-544
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Wiley, 2016.

Abstract

Recessive CRB2 mutations were recently reported to cause both steroid resistant nephrotic syndrome and prenatal onset ventriculomegaly with kidney disease. We report two Ashkenazi Jewish siblings clinically diagnosed with ciliopathy. Both presented with severe congenital hydrocephalus and mild urinary tract anomalies. One affected sibling also has lung hypoplasia and heart defects. Exome sequencing and further CRB2 analysis revealed that both siblings are compound heterozygotes for CRB2 mutations p.N800K and p.Gly1036Alafs*43, and heterozygous for a deleterious splice variant in the ciliopathy gene TTCB21. CRB2 is a polarity protein which plays a role in ciliogenesis and ciliary function. Biallelic CRB2 mutations in animal models result in phenotypes consistent with ciliopathy. This report expands the phenotype of CRB2 mutations to include lung hypoplasia and uretero-pelvic renal anomalies, and confirms cardiac malformation as a feature. We suggest that CRB2-associated disease is a new ciliopathy syndrome with possible digenic/triallelic inheritance, as observed in other ciliopathies. Clinically, CRB2 should be assessed when ciliopathy is suspected, especially in Ashkenazi Jews, where we found that p.N800K carrier frequency is 1 of 64. Patients harboring CRB2 mutations should be tested for the complete range of ciliopathy manifestations.

Details

ISSN :
00099163
Volume :
90
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........462791273d765ad0523432dd49905b04
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/cge.12764