| Literature DB >> 30058938 |
Janine Lenk1, Joseph Porrmann2, Martin Smitka3, Ines Eger4, Evelin Schröck2, Karl Hackmann2, Robert Herber1, Frederik Raiskup1, Andreas Tzschach2.
Abstract
Posterior amorphous corneal dystrophy (PACD) (OMIM 612868) is a rare autosomal dominant disorder characterized by partial or complete posterior lamellar corneal opacification, decreased corneal thickness and flattening of the corneal curvature. PACD is associated with heterozygous deletions in chromosome band 12q21.33 harboring DCN, KERA, LUM, and EPYC which encode small leucine-rich proteoglycans. We report on a 7-year-old male patient with PACD who had an interstitial deletion of 1.3 Mb in 12q21.33. His mother carried a balanced insertional translocation involving this 12q21.33 segment which was inserted into the proximal part of the long arm of one chromosome 13. The patient corroborates previous observations that PACD is a contiguous gene syndrome caused by combined haploinsufficiency of DCN, KERA, LUM, and EPYC and provides the first example of a balanced chromosome rearrangement involving 12q21.33 in an unaffected parent.Entities:
Keywords: 12q21.33 deletion; DCN; EPYC; KERA; LUM; balanced insertional translocation; posterior amorphous corneal dystrophy
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30058938 DOI: 10.1080/13816810.2018.1502792
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ophthalmic Genet ISSN: 1381-6810 Impact factor: 1.803