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Alternative genomic diagnoses for individuals with a clinical diagnosis of Dubowitz syndrome.

Authors :
Dyment DA
O'Donnell-Luria A
Agrawal PB
Coban Akdemir Z
Aleck KA
Antaki D
Al Sharhan H
Au PB
Aydin H
Beggs AH
Bilguvar K
Boerwinkle E
Brand H
Brownstein CA
Buyske S
Chodirker B
Choi J
Chudley AE
Clericuzio CL
Cox GF
Curry C
de Boer E
de Vries BBA
Dunn K
Dutmer CM
England EM
Fahrner JA
Geckinli BB
Genetti CA
Gezdirici A
Gibson WT
Gleeson JG
Greenberg CR
Hall A
Hamosh A
Hartley T
Jhangiani SN
Karaca E
Kernohan K
Lauzon JL
Lewis MES
Lowry RB
López-Giráldez F
Matise TC
McEvoy-Venneri J
McInnes B
Mhanni A
Garcia Minaur S
Moilanen J
Nguyen A
Nowaczyk MJM
Posey JE
Õunap K
Pehlivan D
Pajusalu S
Penney LS
Poterba T
Prontera P
Doriqui MJR
Sawyer SL
Sobreira N
Stanley V
Torun D
Wargowski D
Witmer PD
Wong I
Xing J
Zaki MS
Zhang Y
Boycott KM
Bamshad MJ
Nickerson DA
Blue EE
Innes AM
Source :
American journal of medical genetics. Part A [Am J Med Genet A] 2021 Jan; Vol. 185 (1), pp. 119-133. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Oct 24.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Dubowitz syndrome (DubS) is considered a recognizable syndrome characterized by a distinctive facial appearance and deficits in growth and development. There have been over 200 individuals reported with Dubowitz or a "Dubowitz-like" condition, although no single gene has been implicated as responsible for its cause. We have performed exome (ES) or genome sequencing (GS) for 31 individuals clinically diagnosed with DubS. After genome-wide sequencing, rare variant filtering and computational and Mendelian genomic analyses, a presumptive molecular diagnosis was made in 13/27 (48%) families. The molecular diagnoses included biallelic variants in SKIV2L, SLC35C1, BRCA1, NSUN2; de novo variants in ARID1B, ARID1A, CREBBP, POGZ, TAF1, HDAC8, and copy-number variation at1p36.11(ARID1A), 8q22.2(VPS13B), Xp22, and Xq13(HDAC8). Variants of unknown significance in known disease genes, and also in genes of uncertain significance, were observed in 7/27 (26%) additional families. Only one gene, HDAC8, could explain the phenotype in more than one family (N = 2). All but two of the genomic diagnoses were for genes discovered, or for conditions recognized, since the introduction of next-generation sequencing. Overall, the DubS-like clinical phenotype is associated with extensive locus heterogeneity and the molecular diagnoses made are for emerging clinical conditions sharing characteristic features that overlap the DubS phenotype.<br /> (© 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1552-4833
Volume :
185
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
American journal of medical genetics. Part A
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33098347
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.a.61926