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Molecular analysis of Fanconi anemia: the experience of the Bone Marrow Failure Study Group of the Italian Association of Pediatric Onco-Hematology

Authors :
Fabio Corsolini
Roberta Bottega
Federico Verzegnassi
Adriana Borriello
Elena Nicchia
Silverio Perrotta
Simona Cavani
Marta Pillon
Paola Grammatico
Johanna Svahn
Fulvio Della Ragione
Walter Barberi
Chiara Greco
Anna Locasciulli
Maria Criscuolo
Enrico Cappelli
Ugo Ramenghi
Piero Farruggia
Gabriella Casazza
Daniela Longoni
Fabio Tucci
Chiara Cugno
Daniela De Rocco
Cristina Mecucci
Anna Savoia
Helmut Hanenberg
Carlo Dufour
De Rocco, D
Bottega, R
Cappelli, E
Cavani, S
Criscuolo, M
Nicchia, E
Corsolini, F
Greco, C
Borriello, Adriana
Svahn, J
Pillon, M
Mecucci, C
Casazza, G
Verzegnassi, F
Cugno, C
Locasciulli, A
Farruggia, P
Longoni, D
Ramenghi, U
Barberi, W
Tucci, F
Perrotta, Silverio
Grammatico, P
Hanenberg, H
DELLA RAGIONE, Fulvio
Dufour, C
Savoia, A
Bone Marrow Failure Study Group of the Italian Association of Pediatric Onco, Hematology
DE ROCCO, Daniela
Bottega, Roberta
Nicchia, Elena
Borriello, A
Perrotta, S
Della Ragione, F
Savoia, Anna
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Fanconi anemia is an inherited disease characterized by congenital malformations, pancytopenia, cancer predisposition, and sensitivity to cross-linking agents. The molecular diagnosis of Fanconi anemia is relatively complex for several aspects including genetic heterogeneity with mutations in at least 16 different genes. In this paper, we report the mutations identified in 100 unrelated probands enrolled into the National Network of the Italian Association of Pediatric Hematoly and Oncology. In approximately half of these cases, mutational screening was carried out after retroviral complementation analyses or protein analysis. In the other half, the analysis was performed on the most frequently mutated genes or using a next generation sequencing approach. We identified 108 distinct variants of the FANCA, FANCG, FANCC, FANCD2, and FANCB genes in 85, 9, 3, 2, and 1 families, respectively. Despite the relatively high number of private mutations, 45 of which are novel Fanconi anemia alleles, 26% of the FANCA alleles are due to 5 distinct mutations. Most of the mutations are large genomic deletions and nonsense or frameshift mutations, although we identified a series of missense mutations, whose pathogenetic role was not always certain. The molecular diagnosis of Fanconi anemia is still a tiered procedure that requires identifying candidate genes to avoid useless sequencing. Introduction of next generation sequencing strategies will greatly improve the diagnostic process, allowing a rapid analysis of all the genes.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....764822ab96f4712776bc5c380c2e36fb