| Literature DB >> 29619238 |
Ayako Ueda1, Hiroko Shimbo2, Yukari Yada1, Yasunori Koike1, Takanori Yamagata1, Hitoshi Osaka1.
Abstract
Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (PMD; MIM #312080) is a rare X-linked recessive disorder. A male neonate presented with severe respiratory distress that required tracheostomy. After the appearance of nystagmus, PMD was suspected as a diagnosis for the patient, and a missense mutation, p.Phe51Val, was identified in PLP1, the gene responsible for PMD. PMD can be a differential diagnosis in a male neonate presenting severe respiratory distress.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29619238 PMCID: PMC5874395 DOI: 10.1038/hgv.2018.13
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genome Var ISSN: 2054-345X
Figure 1Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the patient. At 2 months of age, T1-weighted cerebral MRI of the patient reveals no signal contrast between white matter and gray matter (a), and T2-weighted MRI exhibits diffuse high signal intensity at the white matter (b). Both images suggest the delay of myelination. These T1/T2-weighted MRI images (c, d) were obtained at approximately the same time at 8 months and confirm the hypomyelination of the patient. No cerebral atrophy is noted.
Figure 2Sequence chromatogram detected the PLP1 point mutation in exon 2. The patient harbors the missense mutation c.151T>G, which changes Phe to Val at the 51st amino residue (a, b; arrow). His mother was heterozygous at this position and a carrier of the mutation (c; arrow).