| Literature DB >> 25545067 |
Anna Caciotti1, Rodolfo Tonin, Miriam Rigoldi, Lorenzo Ferri, Serena Catarzi, Catia Cavicchi, Elena Procopio, Maria Alice Donati, Anna Ficcadenti, Agata Fiumara, Rita Barone, Livia Garavelli, Maja Di Rocco, Mirella Filocamo, Daniela Antuzzi, Maurizio Scarpa, Sean D Mooney, Biao Li, Anastasia Skouma, Sebastiano Bianca, Daniela Concolino, Rosario Casalone, Elena Monti, Marilena Pantaleo, Sabrina Giglio, Renzo Guerrini, Rossella Parini, Amelia Morrone.
Abstract
Morquio A syndrome (MPS IVA) is a systemic lysosomal storage disorder caused by the deficiency of N-acetylgalactosamine-6-sulfatase (GALNS), encoded by the GALNS gene. We studied 37 MPS IV A patients and defined genotype-phenotype correlations based on clinical data, biochemical assays, molecular analyses, and in silico structural analyses of associated mutations. We found that standard sequencing procedures, albeit identifying 14 novel small GALNS genetic lesions, failed to characterize the second disease-causing mutation in the 16% of the patients' cohort. To address this drawback and uncover potential gross GALNS rearrangements, we developed molecular procedures (CNV [copy-number variation] assays, QF-PCRs [quantitative fluorescent-PCRs]), endorsed by CGH-arrays. Using this approach, we characterized two new large deletions and their corresponding breakpoints. Both deletions were heterozygous and included the first exon of the PIEZO1 gene, which is associated with dehydrated hereditary stomatocitosis, an autosomal-dominant syndrome. In addition, we characterized the new GALNS intronic lesion c.245-11C>G causing m-RNA defects, although identified outside the GT/AG splice pair. We estimated the occurrence of the disease in the Italian population to be approximately 1:300,000 live births and defined a molecular testing algorithm designed to help diagnosing MPS IVA and foreseeing disease progression.Entities:
Keywords: GALNS; MPSIVA; Morquio A; intellectual disability; submicroscopic deletions
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25545067 DOI: 10.1002/humu.22751
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.878