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PORCNmutations in focal dermal hypoplasia: coping with lethality

Authors :
Kaatje Heinelt
Juliane Strien
Annalisa Patrizi
María del Carmen Boente
Karl-Heinz Grzeschik
Yasemin Alanay
Nicolas Chassaing
Ben C.J. Hamel
Ingo Lohrisch
Marie Eleanore O. Nicolas
G. Eda Utine
Ian O. Ellis
Carlo Marcelis
Jeffrey A. Ascherman
Katrina Prescott
Bart Loeys
Arne König
Mauro Paradisi
Christina Raissa I. Francisco
Wolfgang Kastrup
Frank Oeffner
Patricia Silvia Della Giovanna
Paul J. Benke
Dorothea Bornholdt
Maria Piccione
Yasmin Mehraein
Cristina Has
Andreas R. Janecke
Ineke van der Burgt
Bettina Prager
Dana Pagliarini
Hildegunde Piza-Katzer
Marc S. Zeller
Rudolf Happle
Source :
Human Mutation. 30:E618-E628
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Hindawi Limited, 2009.

Abstract

The X-linked dominant trait focal dermal hypoplasia (FDH, Goltz syndrome) is a developmental defect with focal distribution of affected tissues due to a block of Wnt signal transmission from cells carrying a detrimental PORCN mutation on an active X-chromosome. Molecular characterization of 24 unrelated patients from different ethnic backgrounds revealed 23 different mutations of the PORCN gene in Xp11.23. Three were microdeletions eliminating PORCN and encompassing neighboring genes such as EBP, the gene associated with Conradi-Hunermann-Happle syndrome (CDPX2). 12/24 patients carried nonsense mutations resulting in loss of function. In one case a canonical splice acceptor site was mutated, and 8 missense mutations exchanged highly conserved amino acids. FDH patients overcome the consequences of potentially lethal X-chromosomal mutations by extreme skewing of X-chromosome inactivation in females, enabling transmission of the trait in families, or by postzygotic mosaicism both in male and female individuals. Molecular characterization of the PORCN mutations in cases diagnosed as Goltz syndrome is particularly relevant for genetic counseling of patients and their families since no functional diagnostic test is available and carriers of the mutation might otherwise be overlooked due to considerable phenotypic variability associated with the mosaic status.

Details

ISSN :
10597794
Volume :
30
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human Mutation
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........69af5188a16267d619bc01fe9cc81272