| Literature DB >> 31315586 |
Evelina Siavrienė1, Gunda Petraitytė2, Violeta Mikštienė2, Tautvydas Rančelis2, Živilė Maldžienė2, Aušra Morkūnienė2, Jekaterina Byčkova3, Algirdas Utkus2, Vaidutis Kučinskas2, Eglė Preikšaitienė2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: CHARGE syndrome (MIM# 214800)-which is characterised by a number of congenital anomalies including coloboma, ear anomalies, deafness, facial anomalies, heart defects, atresia choanae, genital hypoplasia, growth retardation, and developmental delay-is caused by a heterozygous variant in the CHD7 (MIM# 608892) gene located on chromosome 8q12. We report the identification of a novel c.5535-1G > A variant in CHD7 and provide the evaluation of its effect on pre-mRNA splicing. CASEEntities:
Keywords: C.5535-1G > A splice site variant; CHARGE syndrome; CHD7; Congenital anomalies; cDNA analysis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31315586 PMCID: PMC6637606 DOI: 10.1186/s12881-019-0859-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genet ISSN: 1471-2350 Impact factor: 2.103
Fig. 1Temporal bone CT image showed aplasia of the semi-circular canals (a) and cochlear nerve canal atresia (b)
Fig. 2a The chromatogram and schematic representation of wild-type and mutated sequences illustrate the disrupted acceptor splice site at position − 1 of intron 26, which lead to a frameshift in the cDNA sample. b A comparative sequence alignment produced by ClustalO of the CHD7 protein across seven evolutionarily distant species. Frameshift of 23 new amino acids and therefore a truncated 1869 amino acid sequence is highlighted in red. Below the protein sequences is a key denoting conserved sequence (*), conservative variants (:), semi-conservative variants (.), and non-conservative variants (). c 3D model of the BRK domain, which is absent in the patient. Picture produced by the LiteMol program [33]. d A schematic representation of the CHD7 protein, which is 2,997 amino acids in length, with the arrangement of the main domains: two chromodomains (green), SNF2 domain (red), helicase domain (blue), and two BRK domains (yellow). A schematic view was adopted from the Pfam protein domain database