| Literature DB >> 28915250 |
Shoko Onodera1,2, Akiko Saito1, Daigo Hasegawa3, Nana Morita4, Katsuhito Watanabe3, Takeshi Nomura4, Takahiko Shibahara3, Shinsuke Ohba2, Akira Yamaguchi5, Toshifumi Azuma1,5.
Abstract
Gorlin syndrome is a genetic disorder of autosomal dominant inheritance that predisposes the affected individual to a variety of disorders that are attributed largely to heterozygous germline patched1 (PTCH1) mutations. PTCH1 is a hedgehog (Hh) receptor as well as a repressor, mutation of which leads to constitutive activation of Hh pathway. Hh pathway encompasses a wide variety of cellular signaling cascades, which involve several molecules; however, no associated genotype-phenotype correlations have been reported. Recently, mutations in Suppressor of fused homolog (SUFU) or PTCH2 were reported in patients with Gorlin syndrome. These facts suggest that multi-layered mutations in Hh pathway may contribute to the development of Gorlin syndrome. We demonstrated multiple mutations of Hh-related genes in addition to PTCH1, which possibly act in an additive or multiplicative manner and lead to Gorlin syndrome. High-throughput sequencing was performed to analyze exome sequences in four unrelated Gorlin syndrome patient genomes. Mutations in PTCH1 gene were detected in all four patients. Specific nucleotide variations or frameshift variations of PTCH1 were identified along with the inferred amino acid changes in all patients. We further filtered 84 different genes which are closely related to Hh signaling. Fifty three of these had enough coverage of over ×30. The sequencing results were filtered and compared to reduce the number of sequence variants identified in each of the affected individuals. We discovered three genes, PTCH2, BOC, and WNT9b, with mutations with a predicted functional impact assessed by MutationTaster2 or PolyPhen-2 (Polymorphism Phenotyping v2) analysis. It is noticeable that PTCH2 and BOC are Hh receptor molecules. No significant mutations were observed in SUFU. Multi-layered mutations in Hh pathway may change the activation level of the Hh signals, which may explain the wide phenotypic variability of Gorlin syndrome.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28915250 PMCID: PMC5600381 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0184702
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow chart indicating the validation process for variants.
After the validation steps, 61 variations were selected.
Six major criteria by Kimonis and the PTCH1 mutation in the four study subjects with Gorlin syndrome.
| case | birth date | sex | mutation | phenotype | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| KCOT | BCC | skin pit | skeletal anomaly | calcification of the falx cerebri | family with Gorlin S | ||||
| 1 | 1953 | M | frameshift: p.Leu446fs | + | + | + | + (spinal deformity) | - | + |
| 2 | 1987 | M | splice_donor_variant: c.652G>A | + | + | - | - | - | + |
| 3 | 1983 | M | frameshift: p.Asp460fs | + | - | + | + (rib anomaly) | + | + |
| 4 | 1995 | M | missense: p.Leu505Arg | + | - | - | - | - | + |
The six major criteria include 1) more than 2 BCCs or one under the age of 20 years; 2) odontogenic keratocysts of the jaw proven by histology; 3) three or more palmar or plantar pits; 4) bilamellar calcification of the falx cerebri; 5) bifid, fused, or markedly splayed ribs; and 6) first degree relative with NBCC syndrome.
Fig 2Panoramic radiograph demonstrates the presence of odontgenic keratocysts.
Radiologic images showed odontogenic keratocystes in each individual. Yellow arrows showed radiolucent lesions.
Gene list for 84 genes.
| gene symbol | function | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | |
| BOC | |||||||||
| BCL2 | |||||||||
| BMP2 | |||||||||
| BMP4 | |||||||||
| BMP5 | |||||||||
| BMP6 | |||||||||
| BMP7 | |||||||||
| BMP8B | |||||||||
| BTRC (bTrCP) | |||||||||
| CDON | |||||||||
| CSNK1A1 | |||||||||
| CSNK1E | |||||||||
| CTNNB1 | |||||||||
| DHH | |||||||||
| DISP1 | |||||||||
| DISP2 | |||||||||
| ERBB4 | |||||||||
| FAT4 | |||||||||
| FBXW11 | |||||||||
| FGF9 | |||||||||
| FGFR3 | |||||||||
| FKBP8 | |||||||||
| FOXE1 | |||||||||
| FRMD6 | |||||||||
| GAS1 | |||||||||
| GLI1 | |||||||||
| GLI2 | |||||||||
| GLI3 | |||||||||
| GREM1 | |||||||||
| GSK3B | |||||||||
| HHAT | |||||||||
| HHIP | |||||||||
| IFT52 | |||||||||
| IHH | |||||||||
| KCTD11 | |||||||||
| LATS1 | |||||||||
| LATS2 | |||||||||
| LRP2 | |||||||||
| MAPK1 (ERK2) | |||||||||
| MOB1B | |||||||||
| MTSS1 | |||||||||
| NF2 | |||||||||
| NPC1 | |||||||||
| NUMB | |||||||||
| OTX2 | |||||||||
| PRKACA | |||||||||
| PRKACB | |||||||||
| PTCH1 | |||||||||
| PTCH2 | |||||||||
| PTCHD1 | |||||||||
| PTCHD2 | |||||||||
| PTCHD3 | |||||||||
| RAB23 | |||||||||
| RUNX2 | |||||||||
| SFRP1 | |||||||||
| SHH | |||||||||
| SMO | |||||||||
| STK3 | |||||||||
| STK36 | |||||||||
| SUFU | |||||||||
| TP53 (p53) | |||||||||
| VEGFA | |||||||||
| WIF1 | |||||||||
| WNT1 | |||||||||
| WNT10A | |||||||||
| WNT10B | |||||||||
| WNT11 | |||||||||
| WNT16 | |||||||||
| WNT2 | |||||||||
| WNT2B | |||||||||
| WNT3 | |||||||||
| WNT3A | |||||||||
| WNT4 | |||||||||
| WNT5A | |||||||||
| WNT5B | |||||||||
| WNT6 | |||||||||
| WNT7A | |||||||||
| WNT7B | |||||||||
| WNT8A | |||||||||
| WNT8B | |||||||||
| WNT9A | |||||||||
| WNT9B | |||||||||
| ZIC1 | |||||||||
| ZIC2 (HPE5) | |||||||||
It was classified by the action of the Hedgehog-related gene. Numbers 1–5 were related to hedgehog signaling. 1: hedgehog ligands and regulators; 2: hedgehog receptors and cofactor; 3: transcription factors and regulators; 4: other hedgehog related signaling genes; 5: hedgehog signaling target genes. Numbers 6–9 were related to pathways cross talking with hedgehog signaling; 6: TGF beta signaling; 7: WNT signaling; 8: Hippo signaling; and 9: other hedgehog signaling genes.
Multi-layered mutations were observed in the four study subjects with Gorlin syndrome.
| gene | case.1 | case.2 | case.3 | case.4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BCL2 | ||||
| BMP2 | ||||
| BMP8B | ||||
| BOC | ||||
| CDON | ||||
| CSNK1A1L | ||||
| DISP1 | ||||
| DISP2 | ||||
| FAT4 | ||||
| GLI2 | ||||
| GLI3 | ||||
| HHAT | ||||
| LRP2 | ||||
| NPC1 | ||||
| MTSS1 | ||||
| PTCH2 | ||||
| PTCHD2 | ||||
| PTCHD3 | ||||
| SUFU | ||||
| RUNX2 | ||||
| STK36 | ||||
| WNT9B | ||||
| total number (84) | 15 | 15 | 16 | 17 |
After the validation steps shown in Fig 2, 22 gene alterations were selected from 4 individuals.
Disease-causing mutated gene.
| case | SNP | Gene | nucleoside acid change | type | AA change | Exon number | MAF | MutationTaster2 | polyphen2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | rs76491994 | 'FAT4 | 5698A>C | MISSENSE | Ile1900Leu | 9 | C = 0.0096/48 | disease causing | benign (0.010) |
| 'PTCH2 | 524G>T | MISSENSE | Arg175Leu | 4 | disease causing | probably damaging (0.990) | |||
| 'PTCH2 | 221G>A | MISSENSE | Arg74His | 2 | disease causing | possibly damaging (0.993) | |||
| 2 | rs149931425 | 'WNT9B | 773G>A | MISSENSE | Arg258His | 4 | A = 0.0010/5 | disease causing | possibly damaging (0.579) |
| 3 | 'PTCH2 | 2018G>T | MISSENSE | Arg673Leu | 14 | disease causing | probably damaging (0.990) | ||
| rs535015975 | 'RUNX2 | 85T>C | Phe29Leu | 1 | C = 0.0004/2 | disease causing | |||
| rs3814400 | BOC | 925G>A | MISSENSE | Gly309Arg | 7 | A = 0.0020/10 | disease causing | probably damaging (0.998) | |
| 4 | rs3814404 | BOC | 2737C>T | MISSENSE | Pro913Ser | 17 | T = 0.0076/38 | disease causing | benign (0.007) |
From 22 genes, disease-causing mutated genes were selected by prediction problem, MutationTaster2, and PolyPhen2.