TMCO1 Deficiency Causes Autosomal Recessive Cerebrofaciothoracic Dysplasia


ALANAY Y., Erguner B., Utine E., Hacariz O., ŞİMŞEK KİPER P. Ö., TAŞKIRAN Z. E., ...More

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS PART A, vol.164, no.2, pp.291-304, 2014 (SCI-Expanded) identifier identifier identifier

  • Publication Type: Article / Article
  • Volume: 164 Issue: 2
  • Publication Date: 2014
  • Doi Number: 10.1002/ajmg.a.36248
  • Journal Name: AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS PART A
  • Journal Indexes: Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED), Scopus
  • Page Numbers: pp.291-304
  • Keywords: cerebrofaciothoracic dysplasia, TMCO1-defect, TMCO1, whole exome-sequencing, FACIO-THORACIC DYSPLASIA, SEQUENCING DATA
  • Bursa Uludag University Affiliated: Yes

Abstract

Cerebrofaciothoracic dysplasia (CFT) (OMIM #213980) is a multiple congenital anomaly and intellectual disability syndrome involving the cranium, face, and thorax. The characteristic features are cranial involvement with macrocrania at birth, brachycephaly, various CT/MRI findings including hypoplasia of corpus callosum, enlargement of septum pellicidum, and diffuse hypodensity of the grey matter, flat face, hypertelorism, cleft lip and cleft palate, low-set, posteriorly rotated ears, short neck, and multiple costal and vertebral anomalies. The underlying genetic defect remains unknown. Using combination of homozygosity mapping and whole-exome sequencing, we identified a homozygous nonsense founder mutation, p.Arg87Ter (c.259 C>T), in the human transmembrane and coiled-coil domains protein 1 (TMCO1) in four out of five families of Turkish origin. The entire critical region on chromosome 1q24 containing TMCO1 was excluded in the fifth family with characteristic findings of CFT providing evidence for genetic heterogeneity of CFT spectrum. Another founder TMCO1 mutation has recently been reported to cause a unique genetic condition, TMCO1-defect syndrome (OMIM #614132). TMCO1-defect syndrome shares many features with CFT. This study supports the fact that TMCO1-defect syndrome, initially thought to represent a distinct disorder, indeed belongs to the genetically heterogeneous CFT dysplasia spectrum. (c) 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.