| Literature DB >> 23408678 |
Jay R Shapiro1, Caressa Lietman, Monica Grover, James T Lu, Sandesh Cs Nagamani, Brian C Dawson, Dustin M Baldridge, Matthew N Bainbridge, Dan H Cohn, Maria Blazo, Timothy T Roberts, Feng-Shu Brennen, Yimei Wu, Richard A Gibbs, Pamela Melvin, Philippe M Campeau, Brendan H Lee.
Abstract
In a large cohort of osteogenesis imperfecta type V (OI type V) patients (17 individuals from 12 families), we identified the same mutation in the 5' untranslated region (5'UTR) of the interferon-induced transmembrane protein 5 (IFITM5) gene by whole exome and Sanger sequencing (IFITM5 c.-14C > T) and provide a detailed description of their phenotype. This mutation leads to the creation of a novel start codon adding five residues to IFITM5 and was recently reported in several other OI type V families. The variability of the phenotype was quite large even within families. Whereas some patients presented with the typical calcification of the forearm interosseous membrane, radial head dislocation and hyperplastic callus (HPC) formation following fractures, others had only some of the typical OI type V findings. Thirteen had calcification of interosseous membranes, 14 had radial head dislocations, 10 had HPC, 9 had long bone bowing, 11 could ambulate without assistance, and 1 had mild unilateral mixed hearing loss. The bone mineral density varied greatly, even within families. Our study thus highlights the phenotypic variability of OI type V caused by the IFITM5 mutation.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23408678 PMCID: PMC3688672 DOI: 10.1002/jbmr.1891
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Bone Miner Res ISSN: 0884-0431 Impact factor: 6.741
Demographic Overview of Cohort
| Patient | Gender | Age at OI Dx (years) | Age at examination (years) | Ambulatory status | Height (cm) | Height | Weight (kg) | Weight | BMI (kg/m2) | Race | Familial association | Bisphosphonate treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | M | Birth | 7 | Ambulatory | 118 | −0.4 | 19 | −1.1 | 13 | A/C | Son of patient 3 | Pamidronate (IV) |
| 2 | M | 1.5 | 12 | Ambulatory | 149 | 0.2 | 36 | −0.4 | 16 | A/C | Son of patient 3 | Pamidronate (IV) |
| 3 | F | 0.5 | 48 | Ambulatory w/assistance | 147 | −2.9 | 61 | −0.4 | 28 | C | Mother of patients 1 and 2 | Alendronate (PO) |
| 4 | F | 2.0 | 43 | Wheelchair | 97 | −11.9 | 24 | −1.6 | 26 | C | – | – |
| 5 | F | 2.0 | 33 | Ambulatory | 115 | −6 | 41 | −0.9 | 31 | C | – | – |
| 6 | F | In utero (27 weeks) | 2 months | n/a | 53 | −2.4 | 5 | −0.8 | 17 | C | Daughter of patient 7 | – |
| 7 | M | Birth | 32 | Ambulatory | 147 | −3.6 | 43 | −1.2 | 20 | C | Father of patient 6 | – |
| 8 | M | 0.5 | 60 | Wheelchair | 98 | −10.4 | 33 | −3.6 | 34 | C | Father of patient 9 | Pamidronate (IV) and alendronate (PO) |
| 9 | M | 0.7 | 24 | Ambulatory | 173 | −0.5 | 68 | −0.4 | 23 | A/C | Son of patient 8 | Pamidronate (IV) |
| 10 | F | 2.0 | 23 | Ambulatory | 151 | −1.5 | 74 | −0.4 | 32 | C | – | – |
| 11 | M | 3.0 | 23 | Wheelchair | 152 | −3.4 | 91 | 0.5 | 39 | C | – | – |
| 12 | F | 1.3 | 5 | Ambulatory | 86 | −4.3 | 10 | −1.8 | 13 | C | – | Pamidronate (IV) |
| 13 | M | 0.7 | 47 | Wheelchair | 150 | −2.5 | 54 | −2.2 | 24 | C | – | – |
| 14 | M | n/a | 6 | Ambulatory | 101 | −3.0 | 14 | −3.2 | 14 | C | – | Alendronate |
| 15 | F | Birth | 36 | Ambulatory | 140 | 56 | 28 | C | – | Alendronate; ibandronate; zoledronic acid; calcitonin; teriparatide | ||
| 16 | F | 1 | 4 | Ambulatory | 91 | −2.7 | 12 | −3.1 | 14 | C | Daughter of patient 17 | Pamidronate (IV) |
| 17 | F | 0.5 | 21 | Ambulatory | 147 | 64 | 29 | C | Mother of patient 16 | None |
OI = osteogenesis imperfecta; Dx = diagnosis; BMI = body mass index; IV = intravenously; PO = orally; n/a = not available.
A = Asian; C = Caucasian; H = Hispanic.
Clinical Features of Cohort
| Patient | Blue sclera | Triangular facies | Pes planus | Hyperextensible joints | Limited range supination or pronation | COL1A1/COL1A2 analysis for mutation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | − | + | + | − | Limited | Negative | + |
| 2 | − | + | + | + (knees, elbows) | Limited | Negative | + |
| 3 | − | + | − | + (digits) | Absent | Negative | + |
| 4 | − | + | − | + (digits) | Absent | Negative | + |
| 5 | − | + | − | + | Limited | Negative | + |
| 6 | − | − | − | − | Normal | Not performed | + |
| 7 | − | + | − | − | Limited | Not performed | + |
| 8 | − | + | − | − | Absent | Negative | + |
| 9 | − | − | − | + (digits) | Limited | Negative | + |
| 10 | − | + | + | − | Limited | Negative | + |
| 11 | − | − | − | + (elbows) | Limited | Negative | + |
| 12 | − | + | − | + (ankles, hips) | Limited | Negative | + |
| 13 | − | − | − | + (elbows) | Absent | Not performed | + |
| 14 | − | − | − | + (elbows) | Normal | Negative | + |
| 15 | − | + | − | + | Absent | Negative | + |
| 16 | + | − | − | + | Limited | Negative | + |
| 17 | + | − | − | − | Limited | Not performed | + |
Radiographic Findings of Cohort
| Patient | Calcification of interosseous membranes | Radial head dislocation | HPC | Scoliosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | + | + | + (humerus) | + |
| 2 | n/a | + | − | + |
| 3 | + (fusion) | + | − | + |
| 4 | + | + | + (femur) | + |
| 5 | + | + | − | + |
| 6 | − | − | + (ribs) | − |
| 7 | + (fusion) | + | + (femur) | + |
| 8 | + | + | − | + |
| 9 | + | + | − | + |
| 10 | + | + | + (femur) | + |
| 11 | n/a | + | − | + |
| 12 | + | + | + | − |
| 13 | + | + | + (humerus) | + |
| 14 | n/a | − | + | − |
| 15 | + | No X-ray but supination/pronation absent | − | + |
| 16 | + | + | + (femur) | + |
| 17 | + | + | + (femur) | − |
HPC = hyperplastic callus; n/a = not available.
Figure 1Radiographic features in OI type V. (A, B) Radial head dislocation (arrows on the right) and forearm interosseous membrane calcification (middle arrows) in patients 1 and 3, respectively. (C) HPC in patient 14 at 1.5 years.
Figure 2Prenatal ultrasound at 22 weeks showing bowing of the femur (the crosshairs show the extremities of the femur).
Figure 3(A) Pedigrees of the individuals described. (B) Example of Sanger sequencing results for the IFITM5 mutation, here in patient 10 and her parents. (C) Two affected members of the same family: patients 8 and 9. The father is aged 52 years, and the son is 18 years old at the time of the photograph. Although the son was treated at an earlier age with bisphosphonates, this does not explain the important difference in phenotype.