| Literature DB >> 29974297 |
Nicola Ragge1,2, Bertrand Isidor3, Pierre Bitoun4, Sylvie Odent5, Irina Giurgea6,7, Benjamin Cogné3, Wallid Deb3, Marie Vincent3, Jessica Le Gall3, Jenny Morton8, Derek Lim8, Guylène Le Meur9, Celia Zazo Seco10, Dimitra Zafeiropoulou11, Dorine Bax12, Petra Zwijnenburg13, Anara Arteche14, Saoud Tahsin Swafiri14, Ruth Cleaver15, Meriel McEntagart15, Usha Kini16, William Newman17, Carmen Ayuso14,18, Marta Corton14,18, Yvan Herenger19, Médéric Jeanne19, Patrick Calvas10,20, Nicolas Chassaing10,20.
Abstract
Two distinct syndromes arise from pathogenic variants in the X-linked gene BCOR (BCL-6 corepressor): oculofaciocardiodental (OFCD) syndrome, which affects females, and a severe microphthalmia ('Lenz'-type) syndrome affecting males. OFCD is an X-linked dominant syndrome caused by a variety of BCOR null mutations. As it manifests only in females, it is presumed to be lethal in males. The severe male X-linked recessive microphthalmia syndrome ('Lenz') usually includes developmental delay in addition to the eye findings and is caused by hypomorphic BCOR variants, mainly by a specific missense variant c.254C > T, p.(Pro85Leu). Here, we detail 16 new cases (11 females with 4 additional, genetically confirmed, affected female relatives; 5 male cases each with unaffected carrier mothers). We describe new variants and broaden the phenotypic description for OFCD to include neuropathy, muscle hypotonia, pituitary underdevelopment, brain atrophy, lipoma and the first description of childhood lymphoma in an OFCD case. Our male X-linked recessive cases show significant new phenotypes: developmental delay (without eye anomalies) in two affected half-brothers with a novel BCOR variant, and one male with high myopia, megalophthalmos, posterior embryotoxon, developmental delay, and heart and bony anomalies with a previously undescribed BCOR splice site variant. Our female OFCD cases and their affected female relatives showed variable features, but consistently had early onset cataracts. We show that a mosaic carrier mother manifested early cataract and dental anomalies. All female carriers of the male X-linked recessive cases for whom genetic confirmation was available showed skewed X-inactivation and were unaffected. In view of the extended phenotype, we suggest a new term of X-linked BCOR-related syndrome.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29974297 DOI: 10.1007/s00439-018-1896-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genet ISSN: 0340-6717 Impact factor: 4.132