| Literature DB >> 26900403 |
Martina Rincic1, Milan Rados1, Zeljka Krsnik1, Kristina Gotovac2, Fran Borovecki3, Thomas Liehr4, Lukrecija Brecevic1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Van der Woude syndrome (MIM: 119300, VWS) is a dominantly inherited and the most common orofacial clefting syndrome; it accounts for ~2 % of all cleft lip and palate cases. Intellectual disability (ID) is characterized by significant limitations, both in intellectual functioning (cognitive deficit) and in adaptive behavior as expressed in conceptual, social and practical adaptive skills. Karyotyping has been the first standard test for the detection of genetic imbalance in patients with ID for more than 35 years. Advances in genetic diagnosis have laid chromosomal microarrays (CMA) as a new standard and first first-line test for diagnosis of patients with ID, as well as other conditions, such as autism spectrum disorders or multiple congenital anomalies. CASEEntities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26900403 PMCID: PMC4761178 DOI: 10.1186/s13039-016-0221-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cytogenet ISSN: 1755-8166 Impact factor: 2.009
Fig. 1GTG-banding. Aberrant banding pattern on chr 1 indicated by an arrowhead
Fig. 2aCGH analysis. 5.56 Mb copy number loss in 1q32.1-1q32.3 and additional deletion detected in 1p31.1 (26 Kb) and 1q21.1 (202 Kb) regions, without gene content. Duplication in 3q26.32 (1.9 Mb in size). Genomic coordinates and gen content are written in table (hg38)
Fig. 3FISH analysis. PR11-484D1 BAC (green signal) confirmed duplication of TBL1XR1 genes on chromosome 3q26.32. The arrow indicates the aberrant chromosome
Fig. 4FISH analyses. 1. MCB1 chromosome profile. Light dashed vertical line presenting chromosome MCB band position. On the left side of the figure is normal chr1. showing normal banding pattern. Note aberrant banding pattern on the right side. 1q42.3qter insertion in 1q32.2 position indicated by an arrowhead. Note that a complete MCB band (1q42.3qter) in BIO-Cy5 (yellow) is inserted more proximal to centromere. 2. BAC FISH analysis. RP5-940 F7 (red) 1q42.3, RP11-391H5 (yellow) 1q42.2, RP11-100E13 (blue) 1q42.12, RP11-286E7 (green) 1q32.3. N – normal chr1, INSERTION – aberrant chr1. Note: inserted segment (1q42.2q44) has an normal direction. 3. RP11-99 J16 (green) 1q42, RP11-438G15 (blue) 1q41, RP11-534 L20 (red) 1q32.1. Red arrowhead indicating aberrant chr1. 1q32.1q32.3 deletion and 1q42.2q44 insertion (missing red signal and misplaced order of blue and green signals). N-normal chr1. Del-aberrant chr1. 4. Schematic representation of the detected aberrations. N#1 normal chr; Del#1 aberrant chr. On the long arm of chromosome 1 there are four break points (1q32.1, 1q32.3, 1q44 1q42.13 – red dotted line on N#1) resulting in a deletion of the entire 1q32.2 (shown on Del #1). In addition there is a 1q42.2q44 segment insertion (yellow) on the position of the 1q32.2 deletion — leading to more distal position of 1q32.3-q42.13 (green). Telomeric segment 1q44 (blue) is not affected by this complex rearrangement
Fig. 5Spatio-temporal expression profiles in brain. PLXNA2 shows highest expression pattern in all cortical areas, basal ganglia and thalamus from early to late fetal period. Even though expression level slightly goes down perinatally, it remains high throughout postnatal time. SYT14 and RCOR3 are highly expressed in prenatal human brain (cerebral cortex, basal ganglia, thalamus and cerebellum) and it goes slightly down neonatally. TBL1XR1 expression pattern in brain remains mainly high and stabile throughout lifespan. CD55 expression goes up in perinatal time and remains high throughout postnatal time and adulthood. KCNH1 shows high expression in postnatal cerebral cortex and basal ganglia. FC-frontal cerebral wall, OFC-orbital prefrontal cortex, DFC-dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, VFC-ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, MFC-medial prefrontal cortex, M1C-Primary motor cortex, S1C-Primary somatosensory cortex, IPC-Posterior inferior parietal cortex, A1C-Primary auditory cortex, STC-Superior temporal cortex, ITC-Inferior temporal cortex, V1C-Primary visual cortex, HIP-Hippocampus, AMY-Amygdala, STR-Striatum, MD-Mediodorsal nucleus of the thalamus, CBC-Cerebellar cortex. Period 3 (Early fetal development, 10 PCW (post-conceptional weeks) < Age <13 PCW), Period 4 (Early mid-fetal development, 13 PCW < Age <16 PCW), Period 5 (Early mid-fetal development, 16 PCW < Age <19 PCW), Period 6 (Late mid-fetal development, 19 PCW < Age <24 PCW), Period 7 (Late fetal development, 24 PCW < Age <38 PCW), Period 8 (Neonatal and early infancy, birth ≤ Age <6 M (postnatal months), Period 9 (Late infancy, 6 M< Age <12 M), Period 10 (Early childhood, 1 Y (year) < Age <6 Y), Period 11 (Middle and late childhood, 6 Y< Age <12 Y), Period 12 (Adolescence, 12 Y< Age <20 Y), Period 13 (Young adulthood, 20 Y< Age <40 Y), Period 14 (Middle adulthood, 40 Y< Age <60 Y), Period 15 (Late adulthood, 60 Y +)
Genes important for clinical phenotype of the patient from OMIM database
| Name | MIM | Chr | Phenotype | Clinical synopsis | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LAMB3 | laminin subunit beta 3 | 150310 | 1q32.2 | mutation: | Junctional Epidermolysis – autosomal recessive skin disorder in which blisters occur at the level of the lamina lucida in the skin basement membrane, Herlitz type is more severe than Non-Herlitz type and often results in early death; |
| G0S2 | G0/G1 switch 2 | 614447 | 1q32.2 | ?Van der Woude syndrome (VWS) | VWS is dominantly inherited developmental disorder characterized by pits and/or sinuses of the lower lip, and cleft lip and/or cleft palate (CL/P, CP) |
| IRF6 | interferon regulatory factor 6 | 607199 | 1q32.2 | mutation: | VWS is dominantly inherited developmental disorder characterized by pits and/or sinuses of the lower lip, and cleft lip and/or cleft palate (CL/P, CP); |
| RD3 | retinal degeneration 3 | 180040 | 1q32.2 | mutation: | early-onset childhood retinal dystrophies characterized by vision loss, nystagmus, and severe retinal dysfunction |
| NEK2 | NIMA-related kinase 2 | 604043 | 1q32.2 | ?retinitis pigmentosa 67; | hereditary retinal conditions in which degeneration of rod photoreceptors is more pronounced than that of cone photoreceptors |
| KCNH1a | potassium channel, voltage gated eag related subfamily H, member 1 | 603305 | 1q32.2 | Zimmermann-Laband syndrome 1 | Zimmermann-Laband - rare disorder characterized by gingival fibromatosis, dysplastic or absent nails, hypoplasia of the distal phalanges, scoliosis, hepatosplenomegaly, hirsutism, abnormalities of the cartilage of the nose and/or ears and developmental delay |
aKCNH1 gene is also in group with genes enriched in human brain (see Fig. 5)
Volumetric brain MRI analysis
| AVER/controls | Patient | STDEV | s | |
|
| 3.36 | 3.03 | 0.05 |
|
|
| 3.45 | 3.26 | 0.04 |
|
|
| 3.29 | 3.04 | 0.03 |
|
| cls volumes | AVER/controls | Patient | STDEV | s |
| cerebro-spinal fluid | 152,006.03 | 132,909.60 | 10,435.97 | −1.83 |
|
| 700,914.38 | 533,477.70 | 57,613.85 |
|
| white matter | 527,492.03 | 525,524.77 | 58,502.68 | −0.03 |
| total volume | 1,380,412.44 | 1,191,912.07 | 117,247.09 | −1.61 |
Bold numbers and text are pointing to more than 3 standard deviation deference between control and patient measurements
Fig. 6Literature overview of larger deletions which include additional genes outside of the IRF6 genomic region
Fig. 7Four copies of SRGAP2 genes and duplication events
Short description on ancestral SRGAP2 function
| Gene | mRNA expression | Protein expression | Function | Knockout | Knockdown | Overexpression |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SRGAP2a | ↑ Proliferative zone (VZ and SVZ) | ↑ throughout cortical development culminating at P1 corresponding to the peak of neuronal migration in the cortex | stage 1 neurons: | mice are viable (although born significantly below the expected Mendelian ratio) | ↓ in cortical neurons led to a significant decrease in both axonal and dendritic branching | significantly reduced the number of cells reaching the CP |
VZ ventricular zone
SVZ subventricular zone
CP cortical plate
LP leading process
IZ intermediate zone
aFunction of ancestral SRGAP2
Short overview of SRGAP2 paralogs
| Gene | Estimated time of duplication | Structure | Mapping GRCh38/hg38 | Strand | Expression in human braina | Copy number | Function |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SRGAP2A | protein sequence is highly constrained (no changes among non-human primates, and only a single amino-acid change between human and mouse orthologs) | 22 exons; | 1q32.1 | + | ↑in the germinal layers and cortical plate | 2 | controls cortical neural migration |
| SRGPA2B | ~3.4 million years | promoter and 1–9 exons of ancestral SRGAP2 | 1q21.1 | - | ↓ | 0-4 | interacts with SRGAP2A |
| SRGAP2C | ~2.4 million years | duplication of SRGAP2B to 1p11.2 | 1p11.2 | + | ↑in the germinal layers (in culture longer maintains a high level of expression than SRGAP2A) | 2 | inhibits SRGAP2A - SRGAP2 knockdown |
| SRGAP2D | ~1 million years | duplication of SRGAP2B and additional deletion of exons 2 and 3 → premature termination codonb | 1p21.1 | + | ↓ | 0-4 | most likely no function – probably subjected to nonsense-mediated decay |
afrom Cell. 2012;149(4):912–922 and Cell.2012;149(4):923–935
bparalogs have some additional variants