| Literature DB >> 29477873 |
Daisuke Fukushi1, Kenichiro Yamada1, Kaoru Suzuki1, Mie Inaba2, Noriko Nomura1, Yasuyo Suzuki1, Kimiko Katoh1, Seiji Mizuno2, Nobuaki Wakamatsu3.
Abstract
Lamb-Shaffer syndrome (OMIM: 616803) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by developmental delay, mild to moderate intellectual disability, speech delay, and mild characteristic facial appearance caused by SOX5 haploinsufficiency on chromosome 12p12.1. There are clinical variabilities among the patients with genomic alterations, such as intragenic deletions, a point mutation, and a chromosomal translocation of t(11;12)(p13;p12.1), in SOX5. We report herein a 5-year-old Japanese male with a de novo balanced reciprocal translocation t(12;20)(p12.1;p12.3) presenting a mild intellectual disability, speech delay, characteristic facial appearance, and autistic features. We determined the translocation breakpoints of the patient to be in intron 4 of SOX5 and the intergenic region in 20p12.3 via FISH and nucleotide sequence analyses. Thus, the present patient has SOX5 haploinsufficiency affecting 2 long forms of SOX5 and is the second reported case of Lamb-Shaffer syndrome caused by a de novo balanced reciprocal translocation. This report confirmed that haploinsufficiency of the 2 long forms of SOX5 presents common clinical features, including mild intellectual disability and autistic features, which could be useful for the clinical diagnosis of Lamb-Shaffer syndrome.Entities:
Keywords: Autism spectrum disorder; De novo balanced reciprocal translocation; Lamb-Shaffer syndrome; SOX5
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29477873 DOI: 10.1016/j.gene.2018.02.049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gene ISSN: 0378-1119 Impact factor: 3.688