| Literature DB >> 28742282 |
Karthika Balasubramanian1, Bing Li1, Deborah Krakow2,3,4, Lisette Nevarez1, Patric J Ho1, Julia A Ainsworth1, Deborah A Nickerson5, Michael J Bamshad5,6, LaDonna Immken7, Ralph S Lachman4, Daniel H Cohn1,2,4.
Abstract
Multiple Epiphyseal Dysplasia (MED) is a relatively mild skeletal dysplasia characterized by mild short stature, joint pain, and early-onset osteoarthropathy. Dominantly inherited mutations in COMP, MATN3, COL9A1, COL9A2, and COL9A3, and recessively inherited mutations in SLC26A2, account for the molecular basis of disease in about 80-85% of the cases. In two families with recurrent MED of an unknown molecular basis, we used exome sequencing and candidate gene analysis to identify homozygosity for recessively inherited missense mutations in CANT1, which encodes calcium-activated nucleotidase 1. The MED phenotype is thus allelic to the more severe Desbuquois dysplasia phenotype and the results identify CANT1 as a second locus for recessively inherited MED.Entities:
Keywords: CANT1; chondrodysplasia; desbuquois dysplasia; multiple epiphyseal dysplasia; skeletal dysplasia
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28742282 PMCID: PMC5564418 DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.a.38349
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Med Genet A ISSN: 1552-4825 Impact factor: 2.802