| Literature DB >> 32211354 |
Xiaoxue Wang1,2, Hui Pang2, Birju A Shah2, Hongcang Gu2,3, Lijun Zhang1, Hua Wang2,4.
Abstract
Kagami-Ogata syndrome (KOS) is a rare imprinting disorder characterized by skeletal abnormalities, dysmorphic facial features, growth retardation and developmental delay. The genetic etiology of KOS includes paternal uniparental disomy 14 [upd(14)pat], epimutations and microdeletions affecting the maternally derived imprinted region of chromosome 14q32.2. More than seventy KOS cases have been reported thus far; however, only 10, including two familial, are associated with upd(14)pat harboring Robertsonian translocation (ROB). Here, we reported a male infant with clinical manifestations of facial dysmorphism, bell-shaped small thorax, and omphalocele. Karyotype analyses identify a balanced ROB involving the long arms of chromosomes 13 and 14 both in the patient and his father. We further confirm the pattern of upd(14)pat utilizing DNA polymorphic markers. In conclusion, our case report provides a new male KOS case caused by upd(14)pat with paternally inherited Robertsonian translocation, which represents the second male case officially reported. Notably, a KOS case due to upd(14)pat and ROB is rare. An accurate diagnosis requires not only the identification of the characteristic clinical features but also systemic cytogenetic and molecular studies.Entities:
Keywords: Kagami–Ogata syndrome; Robertsonian translocation; heterodisomy; imprinting disorders; uniparental disomy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32211354 PMCID: PMC7076151 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2020.00088
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1(A,B) Photograph of the patient. (C) Chest radiography of the patient. Thoracic dysplasia (bell-shaped small thorax with coat-hanger appearance). (D) Anterior abdominal wall defect with bowel herniation consistent with history of omphalocele. (The written informed consent was obtained from the parents of the patient for the publication of this image).
Figure 2(A) Karyotype of the patient. (B) Microsatellite analysis. Maternally and paternally derived peaks are showed, respectively. (C) The short tandem repeats (STRs) on the long arm of chromosome 14 analyzed along with their position (hg19 map). (D) Result of SNP-Array. Homozygous regions in chromosome 8 and 11 were identified (Top); No homozygous region in chromosome 14 was detected (Bottom). (E) Schematic representation of the trisomy rescue (TR) mechanism leading to the heterodisomy upd(14)pat. A nondisjunction event between two chromosomes 14 occurred when a male ROB carrier produce a sperm. The segregation of the chromatids determined the formation of sperm with a ROB and a free chromosome 14. Oocyte has one of each normal chromosome 13 and 14. Then, after fertilization, there would be three chromosome 14 in the zygote. In order to avoid cell death of the three chromosome 14, the normal chromosome 14 from the mother will be excluded through the process of post-zygotic TR, which could result in paternal heterodisomy in the early embryo.
Published case reports of upd(14)pat with Robertsonian translocation.
| Wang et al. ( | USA | Female/9-year-old (at the last examination) | Short neck with webbing, a small thoracic cage causing restrictive lung disease, marked angulation of the ribs, small ears, anteverted nares, protruding philtrum, severe mental retardation, and coarse facial features with frontal bossing and prominent maxilla and mandible | Bilateral subarachnoid hygromas requiring a shunt, bilateral Simian creases, and blepharophimosis, severe kyphoscoliosis, seizure disorder | 45,XX,t(13q;l4q) | 46,XX,t(1;14) (q32;q32) | 45,XX,t(13q;14q) |
| Papenhausen et al. ( | USA | Female/20- Second | Puckered lips, hairy forehead, distended abdomen with ventral wall hernia, hypotonia, mechanical ventilation | NA | 45,XX,t(14q;14q) | Normal | Normal |
| Cotter et al. ( | USA | Female/died 6 months | Polyhydramnios, non-pitting edema, a short neck, and a small, a bell-shaped, short thorax with thin ribs, a depressed nasal bridge, small ears, a protruding philtrum, short palpebral fissures, mechanical ventilation | Ossification defect of the cranial base, short long bones | 45,XX,der(13;14) (q10;q10) | 45,XX,der(14;21)(q10;q10) | 45,XY,der(13;14)(q10;q10) |
| Kurosawa et al. ( | Japan | Female/11-month-old (at the last examination) | Polyhydramnios, frontal bossing, hairy forehead, depressed nasal bridge, anteverted nares, protruding philtrum, micrognathia, Small bell-shaped thorax in infancy, coat-hanger, mechanical ventilation, diastasis recti | Blepharophimosis, hepatoblastoma | 45,XX,der (13q;14q) | NR | NR |
| McGowan et al. ( | USA | Female/died 6 weeks | Polyhydramnios, short neck, mild pectus excavatum, slight peripheral edema, and mechanical ventilation, feeding difficulty | Abnormal flexion of the left thumb | 45,XX,der(14;14)(q10;q10) | NR | NR |
| Kagami et al. ( | Japan | Female/20-month-old(at the last examination) | Polyhydramnios, placentomegaly frontal bossing, hairy forehead, small ears, depressed nasal bridge, anteverted nares, full cheeks, protruding philtrum, short webbed neck, small bell-shaped thorax in infancy, coat-hanger appearance in infancy, diastasis recti, constipation, development delay, feeding difficulty | Blepharophimosis, laryngomalacia, joint contractures | 45,XX,rob(14;21)(q10;q10) | NR | NR |
| Walter et al. ( | USA | Male/6-month-old (at the last examination) | Polyhydramnios, digit contractures, small thorax, abnormal ribs, low birth weight, short birth length, required gastrostomy, Small ears, Simian creases Blepharophimosis/short palpebral fissures, protruding philtrum, puckered lips, short limbs | Heart murmur, undescended testes, required tracheostomyl/endotracheal intubation | 45,XY,dic(14)(pll) | Normal | Normal |
| Stevenson et al. ( | USA | Female/7-month-old (at the last examination) | Short palpebral fissures, epicanthal folds, flat nasal root, anteverted nares, long protruding philtrum, small mouth, retrognathia, redundant nuchal skin folds, prominent diastasis recti, and hypotonia a small and bell shaped thorax, and underdevelopment of the scapular necks, Polyhydramnios, feeding difficulty | plagiocephaly, inverted nipples | 45,XX,inv(9)(p11q13),dic(14;14)(p11.1;p11.1) | Normal | 46,XY,inv(9)(p11q13). |
| Berend et al. ( | USA | Female | Polyhydramnios, contractures | NR | 45,XX der(14;14) | Normal | Normal |
| Berend et al. ( | USA | Female | Developmental delay, mental retardation, birth defects | NR | 45,XX, i(14)(q10) | Normal | Normal |
| This study | USA | Male/11-month-old(at the last examination) | Polyhydramnios, narrow forehead, frontal bossing, short palpebral fissures, depressed nasal bridge, anteverted nares, elongated philtrum and micrognathia, bell shaped narrow thoracic cavity with coat-hanger looking ribs, omphalocele | Bilateral undescended testes, left mild hydronephrosis, sacral dimple, adducted thumbs, brachydactyly. | 45,XY,der(13;14)(q10;q10) | Normal | 45,XY,der(13;14)(q10;q10) |
NA, not applicable; NR, not reported.