Back to Search Start Over

Haploinsufficiency ofSOX5at 12p12.1 is associated with developmental delays with prominent language delay, behavior problems, and mild dysmorphic features

Authors :
Michael E. Talkowski
Blake C. Ballif
Roger A. Schultz
Patricia I. Bader
Susan Sell
Zheng Fan
James F. Gusella
Debra J Keelean-Fuller
Suneeta Madan-Khetarpal
Loren Mackay-Loder
Deborah Terespolsky
Urvashi Surti
Jill Pouncey
Santhosh Girirajan
Marilyn C. Jones
Bénédicte Héron‐Longe
Ian Blumenthal
Kenneth N. Rosenbaum
Maria Descartes
Jill A. Rosenfeld
Cynthia C. Morton
Evan E. Eichler
Gwen M. Glew
Alain Verloes
Amy Shealy
Sandrine Passemard
Brigitte Benzacken
Cathy A. Stevens
Eva Pipiras
Nicholas J. Neill
Roger L. Ladda
Rocio Moran
Lisa G. Shaffer
John B. Moeschler
Allen N. Lamb
Judith A. Martin
Stephanie E. Vallee
Kent E. Opheim
Juliann Mcconnell
Bertrand Isidor
Andrée Delahaye
Cédric Le Caignec
Shawnia Ryan
Source :
Human Mutation. 33:728-740
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Hindawi Limited, 2012.

Abstract

SOX5 encodes a transcription factor involved in the regulation of chondrogenesis and the development of the nervous system. Despite its important developmental roles, SOX5 disruption has yet to be associated with human disease. We report one individual with a reciprocal translocation breakpoint within SOX5, eight individuals with intragenic SOX5 deletions (four are apparently de novo and one inherited from an affected parent), and seven individuals with larger 12p12 deletions encompassing SOX5. Common features in these subjects include prominent speech delay, intellectual disability, behavior abnormalities, and dysmorphic features. The phenotypic impact of the deletions may depend on the location of the deletion and, consequently, which of the three major SOX5 protein isoforms are affected. One intragenic deletion, involving only untranslated exons, was present in a more mildly affected subject, was inherited from a healthy parent and grandparent, and is similar to a deletion found in a control cohort. Therefore, some intragenic SOX5 deletions may have minimal phenotypic effect. Based on the location of the deletions in the subjects compared to the controls, the de novo nature of most of these deletions, and the phenotypic similarities among cases, SOX5 appears to be a dosage-sensitive, developmentally important gene.

Details

ISSN :
10597794
Volume :
33
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human Mutation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....04d6ce34aa6fb60ead0a602f177b7a93