| Literature DB >> 20368792 |
Kerry Morrone1, Yanhua Wang, Marjan Huizing, Elie Sutton, James G White, William A Gahl, Karen Moody.
Abstract
Background. Chediak-Higashi syndrome (CHS) is a rare, autosomal recessive disorder characterized by oculocutaneous albinism, immunodeficiency, coagulopathy and late-onset, progressive neurological dysfunction. It also has an "accelerated phase" characterized by hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH). The disease is caused by mutations in the CHS1/LYST gene located on chromosome 1, which affects lysosome morphology and function. We report the case of an African-American child with CHS in Case. This 16-month old African-American girl presented with fever and lethargy. The proband had pale skin compared to her parents, with light brown eyes, silvery hair and massive hepatosplenomegaly. Her laboratory evaluation was remarkable for pancytopenia, high serum ferritin and an elevated LDH. Bone marrow aspirate revealed large inclusions in granulocytes and erythrophagocytosis consistent with HLH. Genetic evaluation revealed two novel nonsense mutations in the CHS1 gene: c.3622C > T (p.Q1208X) and c.11002G > T (p.E3668X). Conclusions. Our patient is one of the few cases of CHS reported in the African American population. We identified 2 nonsense mutations in the CHS1 gene, the first mutation analysis published of an African-American child with Chediak-Higashi Syndrome. These two mutations predict a severe phenotype and thus identification of these mutations has an important clinical significance in CHS.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20368792 PMCID: PMC2846365 DOI: 10.1155/2010/967535
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Med
Figure 1Wright stained bone marrow aspirate smear of the patient with Chediak-Higashi. The arrows in the upper right-hand side point to histiocytes engulfing intact red blood cells. The arrows in the lower left indicate fragmented red blood cells (hemophagocytosis).
Figure 2Peripheral blood smear of our patient with Chediak-Higashi depicting three polymorphonucelar leucocytes with inclusion bodies. These findings are typical in Chediak-Higashi syndrome.
Figure 3Electron microscopy of a neutrophil granulocyte of our patient. The arrows show abnormal large cytoplasmic inclusions.
Figure 4Hair shaft samples under high powered light microscopy. (a) African-American control hair sample, demonstrating evenly distributed pigment in the hairshaft. (b) Hair sample of a previously published severely affected Chediak-Higashi syndrome patient [19], demonstrating an atypical granular distribution of “pigmented clumps” in the hair shaft. (c) Hair sample of our African-American patient with Chediak-Higashi syndrome, demonstrating a similar atypical granular pigmentation pattern as the CHS patient in (b). All images were taken at the same settings using a 40X/1.3 oil objective on an Axiovert200M light microscope.
Figure 5Two heterozygous nonsense mutations in the CHD1 gene in our patient; p.Q1208X in exon 8 and p.E3668X in exon 50.