| Literature DB >> 23140272 |
Charlotte L Bendon1, Aimée L Fenwick, Jane A Hurst, Gudrun Nürnberg, Peter Nürnberg, Steven A Wall, Andrew O M Wilkie, David Johnson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Frank-ter Haar syndrome is a rare disorder associated with skeletal, cardiac, ocular and craniofacial features including hypertelorism and brachycephaly. The most common underlying genetic defect in Frank-ter Haar syndrome appears to be a mutation in the SH3PXD2B gene on chromosome 5q35.1. Craniosynostosis, or premature fusion of the calvarial sutures, has not previously been described in Frank-ter Haar syndrome. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23140272 PMCID: PMC3532175 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2350-13-104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genet ISSN: 1471-2350 Impact factor: 2.103
Comparison of clinical features in patients 1–3 with previous cases with prove mutations
| Gender | M | F | M | M:F 8:2 |
| Consanguinity | + | + | + | 9/10 |
| Prominent forehead | + | + | + | 10/10 |
| Hypertelorism | + | + | + | 9/9 |
| Brachycephaly | + | + | + | 10/10 |
| Wide anterior fontanelle | + | - | + | 10/10 |
| Prominent ears | + | + | + | 5/7 |
| Flat nasal bridge | + | + | + | |
| Micrognathia | + | - | - | 9/10 |
| Class III malocclusion | - | + | + | † |
| Anterior open bite | - | - | + | † |
| Open metopic suture | + | - | + | † |
| Sagittal synostosis | - | + | + | † |
| Raised intracranial pressure | - | + | + | † |
| Hypoplasia of teeth | + | + | + | |
| Broad mouth | + | + | + | 10/10 |
| Broad alveolar ridges | NR | NR | NR | 6/8 |
| Anteverted nostrils | - | - | - | 6/9 |
| Full cheeks | + | + | + | 10/10 |
| Talipes | + | - | + | 5/8 |
| Size discrepancy in feet | - | + | - | † |
| Exostoses | + | + | - | † |
| Subcutaneous nodules | + | + | - | † |
| Contractures/flexion deformity fingers/clawing | + | - | - | 3/10 |
| Short hands/digits, brachydactyly | + | + | + | 10/10 |
| Kyphosis | - | - | + | 5/8 |
| Bowing of long bones | NT | NT | NT | 7/10 |
| Prominent coccyx | + | - | - | 8/10 |
| Aortic regurgitation/prolapse | AVR | AVR | - | 1/6 |
| Tricuspid regurgitation | + | - | - | |
| Mitral valve prolapse/regurgitation | MVP/MVR | MVP/MVR | MVR | 3/6 |
| Ventricular septal defect | - | - | - | 5/7 |
| Double right outlet | - | - | - | 2/3 |
| Megalocornea | - | - | - | 9/9 |
| Congenital glaucoma/raised IOP | - | - | - | |
| Recurrent UTIs/duplex system | NT | + | NT | |
| Bilateral lymphoedema legs | + | - | - | † |
Comparison is made with features in other previously-reported confirmed cases of Frank-ter Haar syndrome with known SH3PXD2B mutations [7].
† − Features not described in any previous reports or Frank-ter Haar syndrome, regardless of whether or not genetic analysis was performed to confirm the diagnosis [1-3,5,7,12-15].
NR - not recorded.
NT - not tested.
AVR - aortic valve regurgitation.
MVR - mitral valve regurgitation.
MVP - mitral valve prolapse.
Figure 1A-D: Patient 1.A: Antero-posterior (AP) view showing facial features including hypertelorism. B: Lateral view showing brachycephaly and micrognathia. C: X-ray (XR) right radius/ulna showing broad appearance of the radius at the junction between the proximal and middle thirds. D: XR left hand showing crowding of the carpal bones, broad metacarpals, proximal and middle phalanges, and flexion at the MCP and PIP joints. E-G: Patient 2.E: AP view showing facial features including hypertelorism. F: Lateral view showing brachycephaly. G: 3D CT scan showing absence of the sagittal suture. H-J: Patient 3.H: AP view showing facial features including hypertelorism. I: Lateral view showing class III malocclusion and brachycephaly. J: 3D CT scan showing absence of the sagittal suture.
Figure 2Genome and sequence context of deletion in The upper panel shows a schematic representation (not to scale) of SH3PXD2B around the deleted region. Exons are shown as rectangles with coding sequence filled black and the 3′ UTR unfilled. Affected individuals were homozygous for a 7,625 bp deletion (double-headed red arrow). The breakpoint (dotted red lines) occurred at the position shown in the sequence chromatogram from patient 2, with an ambiguity of one nucleotide because a cytosine is located at both breakpoints. The lower panel shows the results of PCR with the primer pairs indicated. Individuals homozygous for the deletion failed to amplify using primer pair 12F/13-8R (upper gel image, 2,268 bp product); all family members yielded a truncated product using primer pair 12F/13-7R (lower gel image; non-deleted product would be 11,464 bp) indicating that unaffected family members are heterozygous for the deletion. C: control DNA from an unaffected, unrelated individual. N: negative control. The hg19 co-ordinates of the deleted region are chr5:171,763,754-171,771,378.
Figure 3Schematic plan of (TKS4) protein showing all mutations identified to date and their location in relation to domains defined by PROSITE (prosite.expasy.org). Note the extent of the deletion identified in this family. A deletion of the entire encoding SH3PXD2B gene has also been reported in another affected family [7].