| Literature DB >> 33082981 |
Junpei Hamada1, Fumihiro Ochi1, Yuka Sei1, Koji Takemoto2, Hiroki Hirai3, Misa Honda4, Hironori Shibata4, Tomonobu Hasegawa4, Mariko Eguchi1.
Abstract
We report the first case of Waardenburg syndrome type 4C and Kallmann syndrome in the same person. The patient, a Japanese girl, presented with bilateral iris depigmentation, bilateral sensorineural hearing loss, Hirschsprung disease, hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, and anosmia. We identified a novel SOX10 variant, c.124delC, p.Leu42Cysfs*67.Entities:
Keywords: Disease genetics; Hypogonadism
Year: 2020 PMID: 33082981 PMCID: PMC7522263 DOI: 10.1038/s41439-020-00118-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genome Var ISSN: 2054-345X
Fig. 1The picture of iris, and MRI findings.
a, b Iris depigmentation. a Right (partial depigmentation). b Left (complete depigmentation). c, d T2-weighted brain magnetic resonance imaging. c White arrows show olfactory bulb agenesis. d No abnormalities were noted in the hypothalamus and pituitary.
Fig. 2Partial chromatograms of SOX10.
The upper panel shows a chromatogram of the proband, who had a heterozygous variant, c.124delC, p.Leu42Cysfs*67, which is denoted by an arrow. The lower panel shows a chromatogram of a wild-type sample.