| Literature DB >> 27882484 |
Takuya Ichimura1, Kenichi Yoshida2, Yusuke Okuno3,4, Toshiaki Yujiri5, Kozo Nagai6, Masanori Nishi6, Yuichi Shiraishi7, Hiroo Ueno2, Tsutomu Toki8, Kenichi Chiba7, Hiroko Tanaka9, Hideki Muramatsu3, Toshiro Hara10, Hitoshi Kanno11, Seiji Kojima3, Satoru Miyano7,9, Etsuro Ito8, Seishi Ogawa2, Shouichi Ohga12,13.
Abstract
Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) is a pure red cell aplasia that arises from defective ribosomal proteins (RPs). Patients with this rare ribosomopathy present with neonatal anemia and occasional dysmorphism. Clinical heterogeneity and clusters of causative RP genes hamper the diagnosis and perinatal management. We report three mother-and-child pairs of anemia who were finally diagnosed by whole-exome sequencing. Each pair showed distinct disease severity and response to anemia treatment. Only one mother had the diagnostic dysmorphism, including short stature, webbed neck, and thenar hypoplasia. This mother had a frame-shift mutation of RPL11 (exon 3, c.58_59del). Her infant showed transient neonatal anemia, but had no mutations of RP genes. The other mother-child pairs had a missense mutation of RPS19 (exon 4, c.185G>A), and a splicing error of RPS7 (exon 3, c.76-1G>T), respectively. Other than the reported mutations, there were no variants in genes significantly associated with anemia. Our results suggested that whole-exome sequencing (WES) is effective for achieving a prompt and correct diagnosis of human ribosomopathy.Entities:
Keywords: Diamond–Blackfan anemia; Inherited bone marrow failure syndrome; Ribosomal protein; Whole-exome sequencing
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27882484 DOI: 10.1007/s12185-016-2151-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hematol ISSN: 0925-5710 Impact factor: 2.490