| Literature DB >> 25846317 |
Livia Garavelli1, Viviana Cordeddu2, Stefania Errico1, Patrizia Bertolini3, Maria Elisabeth Street4, Simonetta Rosato1, Marzia Pollazzon1, Anita Wischmeijer1,5, Ivan Ivanovski1, Paola Daniele6, Ermanno Bacchini7, Alfonsa Anna Lombardi7, Giancarlo Izzi3, Giacomo Biasucci8, Carmine Del Rossi9, Domenico Corradi10, Giovanni Cazzaniga11, Carlo Dominici12, Cesare Rossi5, Alessandro De Luca6, Sergio Bernasconi13, Riccardo Riccardi14, Eric Legius15, Marco Tartaglia2.
Abstract
Noonan-like syndrome with loose anagen hair (NSLH), also known as Mazzanti syndrome, is a RASopathy characterized by craniofacial features resembling Noonan syndrome, cardiac defects, cognitive deficits and behavioral issues, reduced growth generally associated with GH deficit, darkly pigmented skin, and an unique combination of ectodermal anomalies. Virtually all cases of NSLH are caused by an invariant and functionally unique mutation in SHOC2 (c.4A>G, p.Ser2Gly). Here, we report on a child with molecularly confirmed NSLH who developed a neuroblastoma, first suspected at the age 3 months by abdominal ultrasound examination. Based on this finding, scanning of the SHOC2 coding sequence encompassing the c.4A>G change was performed on selected pediatric cohorts of malignancies documented to occur in RASopathies (i.e., neuroblastoma, brain tumors, rhabdomyosarcoma, acute lymphoblastic, and myeloid leukemia), but failed to identify a functionally relevant cancer-associated variant. While these results do not support a major role of somatic SHOC2 mutations in these pediatric cancers, this second instance of neuroblastoma in NSLAH suggests a possible predisposition to this malignancy in subjects heterozygous for the c.4A>G SHOC2 mutation.Entities:
Keywords: RASopathies; SHOC2; acute leukemias; brain tumors; cancer predisposition; mazzanti syndrome; neuroblastoma; noonan-like syndrome with loose anagen hair; rhabdomyosarcoma
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25846317 DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.a.37082
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med Genet A ISSN: 1552-4825 Impact factor: 2.802