| Literature DB >> 23587214 |
Marco Ritelli1, Chiara Dordoni, Marina Venturini, Nicola Chiarelli, Stefano Quinzani, Michele Traversa, Nicoletta Zoppi, Annalisa Vascellaro, Anita Wischmeijer, Emanuela Manfredini, Livia Garavelli, Piergiacomo Calzavara-Pinton, Marina Colombi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Classic Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (cEDS) is a rare autosomal dominant connective tissue disorder that is primarily characterized by skin hyperextensibility, abnormal wound healing/atrophic scars, and joint hypermobility. A recent study demonstrated that more than 90% of patients who satisfy all of these major criteria harbor a type V collagen (COLLV) defect.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23587214 PMCID: PMC3653713 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-8-58
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Clinical findings of the 40 patients with cEDS
Abbreviations: A: atrophic scars; H: hypertrophic scars; y, years; w, weeks. Patient(s) ID AN_002501-37 correspond to the identifiers submitted in the LOVD EDS Variant Database (http://www.le.ac.uk/ge/collagen/); cEDS1-2: patients without identified causal mutation, not registered in LOVD; cEDSv-l1: vascular-like cEDS patient with COL1A1 causal mutation. a: In all of the patients the blue of the sclerae was faint.
Figure 1Cutaneous and articular features in patients with cEDS. a-d) marked skin hyperextensibility on the neck, the forearm, the elbow, and the knee; e-h) different scar types, small atrophic, atrophic and hypertrophic, hypertrophic and haemosiderotic; i, j) scars and easy bruising of the knees and pretibial area in a pediatric and an adult patient; k-n) hypermobility of the little finger, the thumb, the elbow and the knee in a pediatric patient; o-p) molluscoid pseudotumors; q) piezogenic papules.
Figure 2Clinical findings in two patients with cEDS. A) Patient AN_002502, with ocular involvement and a, b) dysmorphic features, including epicanthus, blue sclerae, hypertelorism, micrognathia; c-d) skin hyperextensibility; e) easy bruising and atrophic and hypertrophic scars on the knees and pretibial area; f, g) hand and foot deformities, hallux valgus. B) Patient AN_002534 with a severe phenotype; a, b) atrophic and hypertrophic scars on the forehead and the cheeks at the age of 32 years; c) marked skin hyperextensibility on the forearm; d) redundant and sagging skin on the ankles and hallux valgus; e) scars (all types) on the knees and inferior limbs; f) hypermobility of the forefinger; g) outcomes of severe congenital kyphoscoliosis treated with surgery, bilateral valgus knee, scars on the elbows, the forearms, redundant and sagging skin on the ankles, and flat feet.
Figure 3Diagnostic flowchart adopted in this study. The diagnostic strategy was based on the clinical evaluation of the patients followed by COL5A1 sequencing, which detected the causal mutation in the large majority of the cases. COL5A2 was investigated when COL5A1 analysis was negative; MLPA analysis was performed when the two previous analyses were not able to detect the causal mutation.
and mutations in patients with cEDS
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The patient(s) IDs correspond to the identifiers found in the LOVD EDS Variant Database (http://www.le.ac.uk/ge/collagen/); a DNA mutation numbering is based on the cDNA sequence. For cDNA numbering, +1 corresponds to the A of the ATG translation initiation codon in the reference sequence. The reference sequences are based on the GenBank Accession no.: COL5A1 NM_000093.3, COL5A2 NM_000393.3. b For protein numbering, +1 corresponds to the first translated amino acid. The reference sequences are based on GenBank Accession no.: COL5A1 NP_000084.3, COL5A2 NP_000384.2. c The effect on splicing was analyzed using four prediction programs (SpliceSite-Finder-like, MaxEntScan, NNSPLICE and Human Splicing Finder) in Alamut software, version 2.2 (Additional file 1: Figures S1–S6). d The effect on mRNA splicing was verified by RT-PCR of total RNA that was purified from the patient’s skin fibroblasts (Additional file 1: Figure S6B). ° de novo mutation verified by parental testing. ^ Parents not available for de novo testing. # Members of the same family. * Members of different families. e Mutation previously reported [18, LOVD].
Figure 4Large genomic duplication in the gene. A) MLPA analysis showed the duplication of exons 1–11 of the COL5A1 gene that was identified using the SALSA MLPA kits P331-A1 (upper panel) and P332-A1 (lower panel). The MLPA results were analyzed using GeneMarker® software. B) Affymetrix Human Mapping GeneChip 6.0 array analysis, which was performed to define the duplication size, revealed an approximately 191 kb duplication, including the COL5A1 proximal promoter region: chr9.hg19:g.(137,440,166_137,442,686)_(137,633,699_137,638,368)dup. The last normal probe (CN_1326371), the first duplicated probe (CN_1326372) at the 5’ end, the last duplicated probe (SNP_A-1952605), and the first normal probe (CN_383563) at the 3’ end define the duplicated area.