| Literature DB >> 35707774 |
Maha Alotaibi1, Deema Aldhubaiban2, Ahmed Alasmari3, Leena Alotaibi4.
Abstract
Geroderma osteodysplasticum (GO; MIM 231070) is characterized by a typical progeroid facial appearance, wrinkled, lax skin, joint laxity, skeletal abnormalities with variable degree of osteopenia, frequent fractures, scoliosis, bowed long bones, vertebral collapse, and hyperextensible fingers. The disorder results from mutations in the GORAB-golgin, RAB6 interacting. This gene encodes a member of the golgin family, a group of coiled-coil proteins on golgin that maps to chromosome 1q24. The encoded protein has a function in the secretory pathway, was identified by terminal kinase-like protein, and thus, it may function in mitosis. Mutations in this gene have been associated with GO. Herein, we describe the clinical presentation of one young male patient from related Saudi parents. Mutations, a homozygous frameshift mutation (c.306dup p.(pro 103 Thrfs*20)). Interestingly, phenotypic variability was observed in this patient with GO features that were more atypical than the cases reported in the literature as he looks tall stature where most of the cases reported were short and arachnodactyly fingers which mimic other syndromes. The Author(s). This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, permitting unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction so long as the original work is properly cited. ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ).Entities:
Keywords: abnormal; geroderma osteodysplasticum syndrome; hyperextensible fingers; joints; lax skin; scoliosis
Year: 2021 PMID: 35707774 PMCID: PMC9192187 DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1740468
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Med Genet ISSN: 2699-9404
Fig. 1(A) Photograph of the patient showing tall stature, long face, arm span greater than height. (B) Typical facial features of patient include senile appearance, long and droopy face, mid-face hypoplasia, mandibular prognathism, large prominent, a fleshy tip of the nose and prominent ears, (C) wrinkly skin on the abdomen (D) showing generalized gingivitis and severe crowding, (E–G) showing hyperextensible fingers, arachnodactyly and wrinkly skin, prominent veins on the dorsum of the hands and the foot.
Fig. 2Radiological characteristics (A–C) radiographs of patient maintained thoracic kyphosis and lumbar lordosis. Diffuse decreased bone density; osteoporosis. Decreased height of T-7, 8, 9, and T-12 vertebral bodies. Normal height and alignment of the other vertebral bodies. C lateral cephalometric showed severe Cl III malocclusion due to combination between retrognathic maxilla and prognathic mandible.
GORAB mutations in different ethnic groups causing GO syndrome
| Mutation | Ethnicity | Nucleotide change | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Missense | Saudi | 658G > C, p.A220P) |
|
| Nonsense | Germany | 136G > T p Glu46X) |
|
| Nonsense | Libya | 190C4T |
|
| Nonsense | Canada | 367G4T |
|
| Nonsense | Mexico | 367G4T |
|
| Nonsense | Italy | 739C4T |
|
| Nonsense | United State | 784C4T |
|
| Splicing | United State | 662 + 5G4C |
|
| Small deletion | Germany | 1050_1053delTCTT |
|
| Small insertion | Saudi | 226 227 insA |
|
| Small indels | Pakistan | –1_1GA4CT |
|
| Gross deletion | Azerbaijan | Breakpoint between chr1:164037509–170654598 bp on chr 1q23.2-q24.2 |
|
Abbreviations: GO, geroderma osteodysplasticum; GORAB, golgin, RAB6-interacting.