1. Heterozygous pathogenic variants involving CBFB cause a new skeletal disorder resembling cleidocranial dysplasia
- Author
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Tessi Beyltjens, Eveline Boudin, Nicole Revencu, Nele Boeckx, Miriam Bertrand, Leon Schütz, Tobias B Haack, Axel Weber, Eleni Biliouri, Mateja Vinkšel, Anja Zagožen, Borut Peterlin, Shashidhar Pai, Aida Telegrafi, Lindsay B Henderson, Courtney Ells, Lesley Turner, Wim Wuyts, Wim Van Hul, Gretl Hendrickx, and Geert R Mortier
- Subjects
musculoskeletal diseases ,phenotype ,genetic variation ,Genetics ,human genetics ,Human medicine ,Genetics (clinical) - Abstract
BackgroundCleidocranial dysplasia (CCD) is a rare skeletal dysplasia with significant clinical variability. Patients with CCD typically present with delayed closure of fontanels and cranial sutures, dental anomalies, clavicular hypoplasia or aplasia and short stature. Runt-related transcription factor 2 (RUNX2)is currently the only known disease-causing gene for CCD, but several studies have suggested locus heterogeneity.MethodsThe cohort consists of eight subjects from five unrelated families partially identified through GeneMatcher. Exome or genome sequencing was applied and in two subjects the effect of the variant was investigated at RNA level.ResultsIn each subject a heterozygous pathogenic variant inCBFBwas detected, whereas no genomic alteration involvingRUNX2was found. ThreeCBFBvariants (one splice site alteration, one nonsense variant, one 2 bp duplication) were shown to result in a premature stop codon. A large intragenic deletion was found to delete exon 4, without affectingCBFBexpression. The effect of a second splice site variant could not be determined but most likely results in a shortened or absent protein. Affected individuals showed similarities withRUNX2-related CCD, including dental and clavicular abnormalities. Normal stature and neurocognitive problems were however distinguishing features.CBFBencodes the core-binding factor β subunit, which can interact with all RUNX proteins (RUNX1, RUNX2, RUNX3) to form heterodimeric transcription factors. This may explain the phenotypic differences betweenCBFB-related andRUNX2-related CCD.ConclusionWe confirm the previously suggested locus heterogeneity for CCD by identifying five pathogenic variants inCBFBin a cohort of eight individuals with clinical and radiographic features reminiscent of CCD.
- Published
- 2023