| Literature DB >> 29378768 |
Nehir Kurtas1, Filippo Arrigoni2, Edoardo Errichiello1, Claudio Zucca3, Cristina Maghini4, Maria Grazia D'Angelo4, Silvana Beri5, Roberto Giorda5, Sara Bertuzzo6, Massimo Delledonne7, Luciano Xumerle7, Marzia Rossato7, Orsetta Zuffardi1, Maria Clara Bonaglia6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Phelan-McDermid syndrome (PMS) is caused by SHANK3 haploinsufficiency. Its wide phenotypic variation is attributed partly to the type and size of 22q13 genomic lesion (deletion, unbalanced translocation, ring chromosome), partly to additional undefined factors. We investigated a child with severe global neurodevelopmental delay (NDD) compatible with her distal 22q13 deletion, complicated by bilateral perisylvian polymicrogyria (BPP) and urticarial rashes, unreported in PMS.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990SHANK3zzm321990; NFAM1; TCF20; polymicrogyria; topologically associating domains
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29378768 PMCID: PMC5869459 DOI: 10.1136/jmedgenet-2017-105125
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Genet ISSN: 0022-2593 Impact factor: 6.318
Figure 1Patient’s clinical findings: (A) Lateral view of the patient showing urticarial rashes on her face. (B) Brain MRI at the age of 3 years showed bilateral symmetric areas of polymicrogyric cortex in the posterior part of the Sylvian fissures, extending to the parietal lobes. In these areas, the cortex appears thickened and characterised by small gyri (arrows in 2, 3, 4). Corpus callosum is thinned. An arachnoid cyst is present in the right part of the posterior fossa (4) and posteriorly to the lamina quadrigemina (1). (C) EEG-polygraphic recording at the age of 3 years. The red circles indicate background activity during wakefulness, myoclonic jerks on EMG derivation and K-complex and spindles and slow waves during sleep stages 2 and 3–4.
Figure 2Array CGH results: (A) Rearrangement pattern at 22q13: the profile of chromosome 22 shows a terminal deletion of 8.4 Mb at 22q13.2q13.3 (chr23: 42 817 697–51 219 009 bp) and two duplications at 22q13.1q13.2 (shaded in blue). (B) Enlargement of 22q13.1q13.2 showing the normal copy region of 1.1 Mb between two duplicated portions of 2.4 Mb (chr22: 39 106 714–41 497 969 bp) and 148 Kb (ch22: 42 663 298–42 810 963 bp).
Figure 3(A,B) Reconstruction of ring 22 by WGS. (A) Coloured arrows indicate the orientation of the nine fragments relative to the normal chromosome 22 and are shown from proximal (fragment A) to distal (fragment I) with their breakpoints. Duplicated and deleted fragments are indicated by brackets. (B) Reconstruction of the ring 22; GHinv and GinvD fusion points, confirmed by Sanger sequencing, are indicated by horizontal two-way black arrows. Upper: schematic representation of the insertion of the 183 bp Alu-sequence from chromosome 14 in the junction of the GHinv rearrangement. Bottom: chromosome 22 WGS coverage plot from proband, father and control DNAs showing that the three duplications (shaded in pink for fragment B, blue for fragment E and orange for fragment G) and the distal deletion (fragment I), are present in the proband only, whereas the proximal copy number variants are common to all. (C,D) FISH analysis providing positional information on fragment E. Schematic visualisation of the probes’ location on the normal chromosome 22 (C) and the ring chromosome 22 (D) (ring (22)), according to WGS data. The light blue, red and green circles indicate the location of the differentially labelled probes. Fish results (D): (1) Metaphase dual-colour FISH analysis: RP4-742C19 (spectrum red, Genbank Accession: AL031846.2, at 22q13.1), located within fragment E (indicated by the blue arrow), showed two distinct hybridisation signals on the ring chromosome 22 (arrowhead), one of them positioned close to the centromere targeted by probe CEP22 (spectrum aqua, SureFish, Agilent); (2) DAPI-staining of the partial metaphase showing the normal chromosome 22 (arrow) and ring (22) (arrowhead). (3) interphase three-colour FISH (RP4-742C19, spectrum red, RP3-408N23, spectrum green, Genbank Accession: Z98048, at 22q13.1 and 22q13.2, respectively and CEP22, spectrum aqua, Sure Fish Agilent) shows the direct orientation of the two fragments E on the ring chromosome (aqua-green-red-green-red). (4) schematic representation of FISH results on the ring chromosome 22 model. WGS, whole-genome sequencing.
Figure 4View of the TAD region (chr22:42 550 000–42 850 000), disrupted by the GHinv breakpoint located within intron 1 of NFAM1. Inferred TAD boundaries in respect of the GHinv breakpoint (shown with a blue light star) are represented by black hexagons. The TAD connects NFAM1 to TCF20. Genes in black are on the forward strand (+), while those in blue are on the reverse strand (–). TAD, topologically associating domain.