| Literature DB >> 27699475 |
M Phan1, F Conte2,3, K D Khandelwal1, C W Ockeloen2, T Bartzela4, T Kleefstra2, H van Bokhoven2, M Rubini5, H Zhou2,3, C E L Carels6,7.
Abstract
Tooth agenesis and orofacial clefts represent the most common developmental anomalies and their co-occurrence is often reported in patients as well in animal models. The aim of the present systematic review is to thoroughly investigate the current literature (PubMed, EMBASE) to identify the genes and genomic loci contributing to syndromic or non-syndromic co-occurrence of tooth agenesis and orofacial clefts, to gain insight into the molecular mechanisms underlying their dual involvement in the development of teeth and facial primordia. Altogether, 84 articles including phenotype and genotype description provided 9 genomic loci and 26 gene candidates underlying the co-occurrence of the two congenital defects: MSX1, PAX9, IRF6, TP63, KMT2D, KDM6A, SATB2, TBX22, TGFα, TGFβ3, TGFβR1, TGFβR2, FGF8, FGFR1, KISS1R, WNT3, WNT5A, CDH1, CHD7, AXIN2, TWIST1, BCOR, OFD1, PTCH1, PITX2, and PVRL1. The molecular pathways, cellular functions, tissue-specific expression and disease association were investigated using publicly accessible databases (EntrezGene, UniProt, OMIM). The Gene Ontology terms of the biological processes mediated by the candidate genes were used to cluster them using the GOTermMapper (Lewis-Sigler Institute, Princeton University), speculating on six super-clusters: (a) anatomical development, (b) cell division, growth and motility, (c) cell metabolism and catabolism, (d) cell transport, (e) cell structure organization and (f) organ/system-specific processes. This review aims to increase the knowledge on the mechanisms underlying the co-occurrence of tooth agenesis and orofacial clefts, to pave the way for improving targeted (prenatal) molecular diagnosis and finally to reflect on therapeutic or ultimately preventive strategies for these disabling conditions in the future.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27699475 PMCID: PMC5065589 DOI: 10.1007/s00439-016-1733-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genet ISSN: 0340-6717 Impact factor: 4.132
Fig. 1Forms of tooth agenesis. Panel of tooth agenesis (TA) forms in the permanent dentition, listed according to the number of absent teeth. Frontal intraoral pictures and orthopantograms (OPTs) of two adult patients affected with hypodontia, a without cleft and b with cleft (repaired cleft lip involving the alveolar ridge, marked by dashed blue circle), respectively. Frontal intraoral pictures and OPTs of two adult patients affected by oligodontia, c without cleft and d with cleft (repaired cleft lip and palate involving the alveolar ridge, marked by dashed blue circle), respectively. e Internal intraoral pictures (maxillary dental arch, left; mandibular dental arch, right) and OPT of an adult patient affected by complete anodontia, without orofacial clefts (copyright: Wang et al. 2013). X-axis: presence or absence of orofacial cleft in combination with TA. Y-axis: number of absent teeth (hypodontia, 1–5 missing teeth; oligodontia 6–31 missing teeth; anodontia, 32 missing teeth)
Fig. 2Forms of orofacial clefts. Panel of orofacial cleft forms, listed according to the severity based on the cleft extension and orofacial regions affected. Cleft lip types (frontal views): microform (a) (copyright: Cleft lip—A comprehensive review. Shkoukani et al., Front Pediatr. 2013); unilateral incomplete cleft lip (b); bilateral incomplete cleft lip (c); unilateral complete cleft lip (d); bilateral complete cleft lip (e). Cleft palate types (occlusal views): bifid uvula (f); cleft of the soft palate (g); cleft of hard and soft palate (h). Unilateral cleft lip and palate (i): frontal view of the patient in childhood and occlusal view of the same patient in adulthood, where the cleft palate has been repaired (surgical scars marked with blue arrows). Bilateral cleft lip and palate (j): frontal view of the patient in childhood, with protruding vermilion, and occlusal view of the same patient in adulthood, where the cleft palate is still partially open. Unilateral facial cleft extending from the oral region till the eye (K) (copyright: Garg and Goyal 2009). X-axis: type of orofacial cleft. Y-axis: severity based on the cleft extension (intraoral region, perioral region, whole face)
Genes contributing to the non-syndromic co-occurrence OFCs and TA
| Gene | Study | No. of cases | Type of OFC | Type of TA | TA location | Commentsa | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AXIN2 | Case–control study | 500 | OFCs | TA | Unclear | Borderline association for CDH1 and AXIN2 markers | Letra et al. ( |
| CDH1 | Case–control study | 500 | OFCs | TA | Unclear | Borderline association for CDH1 and AXIN2 markers | Letra et al. ( |
| IRF6 | Population-based case–control study | 108 | OFCs | TA | Unclear | Markers of two genes investigated: IRF6 and TGFα | Letra et al. ( |
| Population-based case–control study | 9 | OFCs | TA | Outside | Significant association of IRF6 SNP (rs642961) in homo-/heterozygous patients with isolated OFCs and TA. Determination of TA outside the cleft | Krasone et al. ( | |
| MSX1 | Family-based study | 3 | OFCs | TA | Inside and outside | Three members from same Dutch family. TA location: 18, 28, 38, 48, 15, 25, 35, 45, 14, 24, 22 | van den Boogaard et al. ( |
| Case–control study | 57 | OFCs | HD | Inside and outside | Unrelated patients. Significant markers on MSX1 and TGFB3. HD located outside cleft area for 36/57 patients | Slayton et al. ( | |
| Case–control study | 19 | OFCs | TA | Inside and outside | Unrelated patients. TA location: 15, 25, 35, 45, 13, 23, 33, 43, 31, 41 | Modesto et al. ( | |
| Family-based study | 2 | CL | TA | Outside | One family with four affected members (only two analyzed). TA location: 18, 28, 38, 48, 17, 27, 37, 47, 15, 25, 35, 45, 14, 24, 12, 22, 31, 41 | Liang et al. ( | |
| Population-based case–control study | 126 | OFCs | TA | Inside and outside | Significant association for MSX1 and PAX9 markers | Seo et al. ( | |
| PAX9 | Family-based study | 2 | OFCs | HD | Outside | Family showing dominant hypodontia | Das et al. ( |
| Population-based case–control study | 126 | OFCs | TA | Inside and outside | Significant association for MSX1 and PAX9 markers | Seo et al. ( | |
| TGFα | Population-based case–control study | 108 | OFCs | TA | Unclear | Markers of two genes investigated: IRF6 and TGFα | Letra et al. ( |
| TGFβ3 | Case–control study | 57 | OFCs | HD | Inside and outside | Unrelated patients. Significant association for MSX1 and TGFB3 markers. HD located outside the cleft area for 36/57 patients | Slayton et al. ( |
OFCs orofacial clefts, CL/P cleft lip with or without cleft palate, CL cleft lip, TA tooth agenesis, HD hypodontia, OD oligodontia
aWhen available, the missing teeth are indicated in the comments column with the official enumeration
Fig. 3Search flowchart. The literature search was performed using PubMed, which provided 166 articles, and EMBASE, which provided 281 articles, combining to a total of 447 articles. After the removal of duplicates (100), the selection process was carried out in two steps. In the first selection, the references where screened based on the document specifics: non-English articles (20), conference reports (10) and not available articles (10) were removed. The second selection of the remaining 307 articles was based on the contents, considering the molecular diagnosis and the combined phenotypes (TA and OFCs) present in patients and animal models, excluding 221 articles. For five articles the authors were contacted, and three of them were subsequently included. The final number of selected articles was 84, including research articles, case reports, research letters and reviews
Genes contributing to OFCs and TA in mouse models
| Gene | Mouse strain | Type of OFC | Type of TA | Comments | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MSX1 | Msx1−/− | CP | OD | Perinatal lethality in homozygous deficient mice | Satokata and Maas ( |
| Msx1−/− | CP | TA | Also Msx1-Bmp4 transgene (Msx1−/−/Tg) mice were generated: the tooth agenesis was partially rescued and the palate appeared intact, although the rugae did not fuse at the midline | Zhang et al. ( | |
| Pax9−/−; Msx1−/− | CL | TA | The double-mutant mice show incompletely penetrant CL (38 % of cases) and lower incisors missing. Other genotypes were tested | Nakatomi et al. ( | |
| PAX9 | Pax9flox/flox;PGK-Cre Pax9flox/flox;Wnt1-Cre | CP | TA | Inactivation of Pax9 using Wnt1-Cre mice leads to CP (secondary palate) and TA and in other structures derived from neural crest cells | Kist et al. ( |
| Pax9−/−;Msx1−/− | CL | TA | 39 % of the mutants exhibit unilateral or bilateral CL while 100 % show the absence of teeth due to the lack of alveolar bones | Nakatomi et al. ( | |
| PITX2 | Pitx2−/− | CP | TA/OD | In human, this gene is causative of Axenfeld–Rieger syndrome type 1 (OMIM## 180500) | Lu et al. ( |
| PTCH1 | K14-Shh | OFCs | HD | In human, this gene is causative of Nevoid basal cell carcinoma syndrome (OMIM## 109400). Ptch1 encodes for the Shh pathway: the mice used as NBCCS model express Shh in basal epithelium under keratin-14 promoter | Cobourne et al. ( |
OFCs orofacial clefts, CL/P cleft lip with or without cleft palate, CL cleft lip, TA tooth agenesis, HD hypodontia, OD oligodontia
Genes contributing to the syndromic co-occurrence of OFCs and TA in presence of other phenotypes
| Gene | Syndrome | Study | No. of cases | Type of OFC | Type of TA | TA location | Commentsa | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BCOR | Oculofaciocardiodental syndrome (OMIM# 300166) | Case series/literature review | 2 | CP/BF | HD/OD | Inside and outside | Two unrelated patients affected by different BCOR mutations | Feberwee et al. ( |
| FGFR1 (KAL2) | Kallman syndrome type 2 (OMIM# 147950) | Case series/literature review | 2 | CLP | OD | Inside and outside | Two patients reported in this study. Missing teeth: 52, 51, 61, 62, 72, 82 (pt. 2); 15,12,11,21, 47 45, 42, 32, 35 (pt. 6). In addition, a CLP-HD patient was found by through literature review (Pitteloud et al. | Bailleul-Forestier et al. ( |
| Kallman syndrome type 2 (OMIM# 147950) | Family-based study | 1 | CP | TA | Outside | One inherited (R622Q) and two de novo (C178S, R622G) mutations | Zenaty et al. ( | |
| Kallman syndrome type 2 (OMIM# 147950) | Family and unrelated case study | 1 | CP | TA | Outside | Proband II-2 shows CP and TA, along with an FGFR1 mutation | Xu et al. ( | |
| Kallman syndrome type 2 (OMIM# 147950) | Family-based study | 1 | CL/P | TA | Unclear | – | Tommiska et al. ( | |
| Kallman syndrome type 2 (OMIM# 147950) | Case–control study | 1 | CLP | TA | Unclear | – | Xu et al. ( | |
| KISS1R | Hypogonadotropic hypogonadism with or without anosmia type 8 (OMIM# 614837) | Case–control study | 1 | CL | TA | Unclear | Gene proposed as a new candidate causative gene for Kallman syndrome | Xu et al. ( |
| IRF6 | Van der Woude syndrome (OMIM# 119300) | Family-based study | 3 | CLP (1) CL (2) | HD | Inside and outside | – | Wienker et al. ( |
| Van der Woude syndrome (OMIM# 119300) | Case report/series | 2 | CLP | HD | Unclear | The two affected subjects are brothers | Item et al. ( | |
| Van der Woude syndrome (OMIM# 119300) | Family-based study | 22 | CLP (14) CP (8) | HD | Unclear | Authors contacted to ask for further details. 12 VWS families showing OFCs and hypodontia in 22 members in total | Peyrard-Janvid et al. ( | |
| Van der Woude syndrome (OMIM# 119300) | Family-based study | 3 | CLP(2) CL(1) | HD | Unclear | The CL patient and the two CLP patients belong to two families with VWS | Ye et al. ( | |
| Van der Woude syndrome (OMIM# 119300) | Case report/series | 1 | CLP | HD | Outside | The affected subject of interest is the father of the proband. TA of 12 and 22 | Minones-Suarez et al. ( | |
| Popliteal pterygium syndrome (OMIM# 119500) | Family-based study | 1 | CLP | HD | Unclear | Authors contacted to ask for further details. The affected subject belongs to a PPS family | Peyrard-Janvid et al. ( | |
| KMT2D (MLL2) | Kabuki syndrome type 1 (OMIM# 147920) | Case report/series | 1 | CP | HD | Outside | – | David-Paloyo et al. ( |
| MSX1 | Wolf–Hirschhorn Syndrome (OMIM# 194190) | Case report/series | 1 | CP | OD | Outside | Only patient exhibiting a deletion on MSX1 gene, with a ring-chromosome. TA of 18, 38, 48 | Nieminen et al. ( |
| OFD1 | Orofaciodigital syndrome type 1 (OMIM# 311200) | Family-based study | 1 | ARC | OD | Unclear | – | Shimojima et al. ( |
| PVRL1 | Cleft lip/palate-Ectodermal dysplasia syndrome (OMIM# 225060) | Case report/series | 1 | CLP | HP | Unclear | – | Yoshida et al. ( |
| SATB2 | Glass syndrome (OMIM# 612313) | Case report/series | 1 | CPO | OD | Outside | Small intragenic duplication affecting SATB2 | Lieden et al. ( |
| Glass syndrome (OMIM# 612313) | Case report/series | 2 | CP | OD | Unclear | 1 Patient analyzed and re-interpretation of 1 case from the literature. Gene found disrupted because located in a translocation breakpoint | Rainger et al. ( | |
| TBX1 | Velocardiofacial syndrome (OMIM# 192430) | Case report/series | 4 | CP | TA | Outside | 1 Patient has TA in the maxilla, 1 in the mandible and 2 in both jaws. Patient 1: 12, 22, 37. Patient 2: 15, 23, 25, 35, 41, 45. Patient 3: 15, 25. Patient 4: 32 | Heliövaara et al. ( |
| TBX22 | Cleft palate with ankyloglossia (OMIM# 303400) | Population-based study | 1 (at least) | CLP | HD | Outside | Many patients have been reported and HD was also evaluated, but only for this patient the co-occurrence of CLP and HD (25 missing teeth) is clearly described | Kantaputra et al. ( |
| Cleft palate with ankyloglossia (OMIM# 303400) | Case report/series | 1 | CLP | HD | Outside | The affected patient showed a TBX22 mutation causative of the phenotypes. 25 missing teeth | Kaewkhampa et al. ( | |
| TP63 | AEC syndrome | Case report/series | 2 | CLP | HD | Unclear | Unrelated patients affected by different TP63 mutations | Clements et al. ( |
| AEC syndrome | Family-based study | 1 | CLP | HD | Unclear | – | McGrath et al. ( | |
| TP63 | Ectodermal dysplasia and B cell leukemia/lymphoma | Case report/series | 1 | CP | OD | Unclear | – | Cabanillas et al. ( |
| TP63 | Ectrodactyly-ectodermal dysplasia-clefting (EEC) syndrome | Case report/series | 4 | CLP | HD | Unclear | Unrelated patients | Clements et al. ( |
| TP63 | Ectrodactyly-ectodermal dysplasia-clefting (EEC) syndrome | Case report/series | 2 | OFCs | HD | Inside and outside | Unrelated patients | Yin et al. ( |
| TP63 | ELA syndrome | Case report/series | 1 | CP | HD | Unclear | ADULT syndrome in combination with CPO (although usually not associated) | Prontera et al. ( |
| TP63 | New (mixed spectrum: EEC, AEC and RHS) | Case report/series | 1 | CLP | HD | Unclear | HD of the deciduous dentition | Steele et al. ( |
| TWIST1 | Proposed new syndrome | Case report/series | 1 | CP | HD | Unclear | Microdeletion affecting TWIST1 gene only | Busche et al. ( |
OFCs orofacial clefts, CL/P cleft lip with or without cleft palate, CL cleft lip, TA tooth agenesis, HD hypodontia, OD oligodontia
aWhen available, the missing teeth are indicated in the comments column with the official enumeration
Genomic loci associated with OFCs and TA in human
| Gene | Study | No. of patients | Type of OFC | Type of TA | TA location | Comments | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1q21–q25 | Case report/series | 1 | CLP | OD | Unclear | The reported patient exhibits a del(1)(q21–q25) | Schinzel and Schmid ( |
| 1q32 | Family-based study | 2 | CL/P | HD | Inside and outside | The patients are affected by Van der Woude syndrome (OMIM# 119300), with del(1)(q32) | Wong et al. ( |
| 2q31.2–q33.2 | Case report/series | 1 | CP | OD | Outside | Analysis of CNVs by CGH showed in this patient a del(2)(q31.2–q33.2). Proposed new syndrome | Rifai et al. ( |
| 4p16.3 | Case report/series | 1 | CP | OD | Unclear | The patient is affected by Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome (OMIM# 194190) | Maas et al. ( |
| 8q24 | Case–control/Family-based study | 31 | OFCs | TA | Outside | The locus contains an SNP (rs987525) significantly associated with OFCs and TA | Yildirim et al. ( |
| 16q22 | Case report/series | 4 | CP | OD | Inside and outside | All the patients belong to the same family. Three of them present a fragile site in 16q22 | Bettex et al. ( |
| Case report/series | 1 | CP | HD | Outside | The patient, affected by oropalatal Bettex–Graf dysplasia, showed a fragile site in 16q22 | Janiszewska-Olszowska et al. ( | |
| Case report/series | 1 | CP | OD | Outside | The patient shows a fragile site in 16q22 and features similar to those of Bettex–Graf dysplasia | McKenzie et al. ( |
OFCs orofacial clefts, CL/P cleft lip with or without cleft palate, CL cleft lip, TA tooth agenesis, HD hypodontia, OD oligodontia