| Literature DB >> 25234129 |
Yanliang Zhang1, Yanhui Liu2, Ya Li3, Yong Duan4, Keyun Zhang5, Junwang Wang6, Yong Dai7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We report on two brothers with a distinct syndromic phenotype and explore the potential pathogenic cause.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25234129 PMCID: PMC4355004 DOI: 10.1186/s12881-014-0105-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genet ISSN: 1471-2350 Impact factor: 2.103
Figure 1The poorly developed permanent teeth of the patient 1.
Figure 2Only with the aid, the patient 1 was able to stand on tiptoe.
Figure 3The lower limbs of the patient 1 showing many wounds caused by frostbite or burn unconsciously.
The hormones detection results of two brothers
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| Triiodothyronine (T3) | 1.79 | 2.35 | 1.3 ~ 3.1 nmol/L |
| Thyroxine (T4) | 112.9 | 121.6 | 66 ~ 181 nmol/L |
| Free triiodothyronine (FT3) | 4.13 | 5.28 | 3.10 ~ 6.80 pmol/L |
| Free thyroxine (FT4) | 16.34 | 16.18 | 12 ~ 22 pmol/L |
| Thyrotropic-stimulating hormone (TSH) | 3.30 | 3.70 | 0.27 ~ 4.20 uIU/ml |
| Luteinizing hormone (LH) | 0.549 | 0.234 | 1.70 ~ 8.60 mIU/ml |
| Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) | 1.67 | 0.935 | 1.5 ~ 12.4 mIU/ml |
| Prolactin (PRL) | 84.69 | 81.83 | 98 ~ 456 uIU/ml |
| Estradiol (E2) | 24.05 | 18.35 | 49.2 ~ 218 pmol/L |
| Testosterone (T) | 0.069 | 0.069 | 9.90 ~ 27.80 nmol/L |
| Progesterone (P) | 0.095 | 0.095 | 0.70 ~ 4.30 nmol/L |
| Corticosteroid (CRO) | 196.2 | 166.5 | 171 ~ 536 nmol/L |
| Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) | 9.2 | 7.1 | 2.2 ~ 16.6 pmol/L |
Figure 4The Pedigree of the family. The open square: normal male individual; the closed square: affected male individual; the closed square with an arrow: male proband; the open square with a slash: deceased male individual; the small closed circle: abortion; the open large circle with a closed circle in center: asymptomatic female carrier.
Figure 5The patient 2 was only able to stand with assistance.
Summary of original exome sequencing data
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| Patient 1 | 3.93 | 3.04 | 77.35 | 2.50 | 63.61 | 37.81 | 37.47 | 99.10 | 66.01 |
| Patient 2 | 3.52 | 2.67 | 75.85 | 2.22 | 63.07 | 37.81 | 37.41 | 99.00 | 58.70 |
| mother | 4.05 | 3.13 | 77.28 | 2.57 | 63.46 | 37.81 | 37.35 | 99.00 | 68.22 |
Identification of the candidate genes for two brothers by exome sequencing
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| NS/SS/I | 2983 | 2981 |
| Not in dbSNP129, 1000 Genome Project, eight HapMap exomes, and YH genome | 51 | 33 |
| Comparing to the mother | 14 | 8 |
| Shared by two cases | 3 | |
Each cell indicates the number of genes with nonsynonymous (NS) variants, splice acceptor and donor site mutations (SS) and coding indels (I). Rows show the effect of excluding from consideration variants found in dbSNP129, 1000 Genome Project, the eight HapMap exomes, and the YH genome. Columns show the effect of requiring that NS/SS/Indel variants be observed in each case.
Figure 6Genomic structure of the exons encoding the open reading frame of and identified mutations. ABCD1 is composed of ten exons that encode untranslated regions (UTR) (orange) and protein coding sequence (blue) (upper panel). Sanger sequence of codons 375–377 in exon 3 of ABCD1 indicated the same mutation was present in two brothers and their mother (middle panel). E376Q missense mutation was at a highly conserved position in ABCD1 shown by comparison to the corresponding sequence of six vertebrates (lower panel). Rattus = Rattus norvegicus; Cricetulus = Cricetulus griseus; Pan = Pan troglodytes; Canis = Canis lupus familiaris; Bos = Bos Taurus.
Figure 7Genomic structure of the exons encoding the open reading frame of and identified mutations. DACH2 is composed of twelve exons that encode untranslated regions (UTR) (orange) and protein coding sequence (blue) (upper panel). Sanger sequence of codons 356–358 in exon 6 of DACH2 indicated the same mutation was present in two brothers and their mother (middle panel). S357C missense mutation was at a highly conserved position in DACH2 shown by comparison to the corresponding sequence of six vertebrates (lower panel). Rattus = Rattus norvegicus; Cricetulus = Cricetulus griseus; Pan = Pan troglodytes; Canis = Canis lupus familiaris; Bos = Bos Taurus.
The exome sequencing and sanger sequencing results of the 3 candidate genes
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| 9 | 79,726,915 | G | G/T | G/T | G | G | G | G | G |
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| 9 | 79,726,932 | T | T/A | T/A | T/A | T | T | T | T |
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| X | 85,856,344 | A | T | T | A/T | T | T | A/T | A |
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| X | 152,654,804 | G | C | C | C/G | C | C | C/G | G |
Phenotypic comparison between reported male ALD forms and two brothers
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| Childhood cerebral | Onset at 3–10 years of age with a peak at seven years. This form virtually never occurs before three years of age. Affected boys present with progressive behavioural and cognitive neurological deficits, such as inattention, hyperactivity, deterioration in handwriting skills, diminishing school performance; difficulty in understanding speech, spatial orientation; clumsiness; visual disturbances; and aggressive behavior. Brain MRI examination can be strikingly abnormal even when symptoms are relatively mild. Most individuals have impaired adrenocortical function at the time that neurological disturbances are first noted. Total disability often within 3 years. | Onset before 2 years of age. Presentation is not progressive, including congenital language disorder, intellectual disability, growth retardation, response retardation, dysphoria, drooling; difficulty in walking and standing; urinary incontinence and fecal incontinence; movement and sensory dysfunctions of lower limbs; normal brain MRI, normal adrenocortical function. |
| Adrenomyeloneuropathy (AMN) | Onset at 28 ± 9 years, progressive stiffness and weakness of legs, abnormalities of sphincter control, sexual dysfunction, distal axonopathy, inflammation mild or absent, mainly spinal cord involvement, cerebral involvement later in 45% of cases. | |
| Adolescent cerebral | Like childhood cerebral, but onset at 10–21 years of age. Somewhat slower progression. | |
| Adult cerebral | Dementia, behavioral disturbances. Rapid inflammatory cerebral progression resembling the childhood form, without preceding AMN, onset after 21 years of age. | |
| Addison-only | Primary adrenocortical insufficiency without neurological abnormalities, including unexplained vomiting, weakness, coma, onset before 7.5 years of age. | |
| Asymptomatic or presymptomatic | ALD gene abnormality without neurological or endocrine abnormalities, further studies can reveal subclinical adrenal insufficiency or mild AMN phenotype. This form is common in boys under 4 years of age. | |
| Olivo-ponto-cerebellar | Cerebral and brain stem involvement, onset between adolescence to adulthood. |