| Literature DB >> 24357330 |
Gerarda Cappuccio1, Rita Genesio, Valentina Ronga, Alberto Casertano, Antonella Izzo, Maria Pia Riccio, Carmela Bravaccio, Maria Carolina Salerno, Lucio Nitsch, Generoso Andria, Daniela Melis.
Abstract
Langer-Giedion syndrome (LGS) is caused by a deletion of chromosome 8q23.3-q24.11. The LGS clinical spectrum includes intellectual disability (ID), short stature, microcephaly, facial dysmorphisms, exostoses. We describe a 4-year-old girl with ID, short stature, microcephaly, distinctive facial phenotype, skeletal signs (exostoses on the left fibula, coccyx agenesis, stubby and dysmorphic sphenoid bone, osteoporosis), central nervous system malformations (hypoplastic and dysmorphic corpus callosum and septum pellucidum), pituitary gland hypoplasia and hyperreninemia. Array-CGH revealed complex chromosomal rearrangements. A diagnosis of LGS was confirmed by the detection of a 8q23.3-q24.1 deletion. Associated chromosomal abnormalities were a 21q22.1 deletion and a balanced reciprocal translocation t(2;11)(p24;p15) de novo, confirmed by FISH analysis. We document the patient's atypical findings, never described in LGS patients, in order to update the genotype-phenotype correlation. We speculate that the disruption of regulatory elements mapping upstream CYP11B2 involved in the deleted region could cause hyperreninemia.Entities:
Keywords: 8q deletion; CYP11B2 deficiency; Cornelia de Lange syndrome; Langer-Giedion syndrome; hyperreninemia; mental delay
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24357330 DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.a.36326
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med Genet A ISSN: 1552-4825 Impact factor: 2.802