| Literature DB >> 31149344 |
Yuichi Ueno1, Takashi Enokizono1, Hiroko Fukushima1,2, Tatsuyuki Ohto1,2, Kazuo Imagawa1, Mai Tanaka1, Aiko Sakai1, Hisato Suzuki3, Tomoko Uehara3, Toshiki Takenouchi3, Kenjiro Kosaki3, Hidetoshi Takada1,2.
Abstract
Phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) plays an important role in tumor suppression. A germline mutation in the PTEN gene induces not only PTEN hamartoma tumor syndrome, including Cowden syndrome, but also macrocephaly/autism syndrome. Here, we describe a boy with macrocephaly/autism syndrome harboring a novel missense heterozygous PTEN mutation, c.959T>C (p.Leu320Ser). Interestingly, a previously reported nonsense mutation resulting in p.Leu320X was found in Cowden syndrome patients. Our case may be suggestive of a genotype-phenotype correlation.Entities:
Keywords: Autism spectrum disorders; Genetics of the nervous system
Year: 2019 PMID: 31149344 PMCID: PMC6531540 DOI: 10.1038/s41439-019-0056-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genome Var ISSN: 2054-345X
Fig. 1Head MRI at 10 months of age.
a Axial T2-weighted image and b coronal FLAIR image show hyperintensity in the bilateral periventricular white matter regions (yellow arrowhead) and enlarged periventricular spaces (thin yellow arrow). c Sagittal T1-weighted image shows a narrow posterior fossa (broad yellow arrow)
Fig. 2PTEN sequences of the patient and his parents.
The patient has a heterozygous missense mutation, NM_000314.4: c.959T>C, [p.(Leu320Ser)] (arrow) in PTEN exon 8. This mutation was not found in his parents