Back to Search Start Over

REST Final-Exon-Truncating Mutations Cause Hereditary Gingival Fibromatosis

Authors :
Janson White
Megan T. Cho
James R. Lupski
Kivanc Cefle
Claudia M.B. Carvalho
Donna M. Muzny
Kivanc Bektas-Kayhan
Yavuz Bayram
Ender Karaca
Nursel Elcioglu
Richard A. Gibbs
Shalini N. Jhangiani
Amber Begtrup
Ali Menteş
Neda Zadeh
Zeynep Coban Akdemir
Sukru Ozturk
Ozgur Kasapcopur
Ingrid S. Paine
Asuman Gedikbasi
Davut Pehlivan
Sukru Palanduz
Bayram, Yavuz
White, Janson J.
Elcioglu, Nursel
Cho, Megan T.
Zadeh, Neda
Gedikbasi, Asuman
Palanduz, Sukru
Ozturk, Sukru
Cefle, Kivanc
Kasapcopur, Ozgur
Akdemir, Zeynep Coban
Pehlivan, Davut
Begtrup, Amber
Carvalho, Claudia M. B.
Paine, Ingrid Sophie
Mentes, Ali
Bektas-Kayhan, Kivanc
Karaca, Ender
Jhangiani, Shalini N.
Muzny, Donna M.
Gibbs, Richard A.
Lupski, James R.
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2017.

Abstract

Hereditary gingival fibromatosis (HGF) is the most common genetic form of gingival fibromatosis that develops as a slowly progressive, benign, localized or generalized enlargement of keratinized gingiva. HGF is a genetically heterogeneous disorder and can be transmitted either as an autosomal-dominant or autosomal-recessive trait or appear sporadically. To date, four loci (2p22.1, 2p23.3–p22.3, 5q13–q22, and 11p15) have been mapped to autosomes and one gene ( SOS1 ) has been associated with the HGF trait observed to segregate in a dominant inheritance pattern. Here we report 11 individuals with HGF from three unrelated families. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) revealed three different truncating mutations including two frameshifts and one nonsense variant in RE1-silencing transcription factor ( REST ) in the probands from all families and further genetic and genomic analyses confirmed the WES-identified findings. REST is a transcriptional repressor that is expressed throughout the body; it has different roles in different cellular contexts, such as oncogenic and tumor-suppressor functions and hematopoietic and cardiac differentiation. Here we show the consequences of germline final-exon-truncating mutations in REST for organismal development and the association with the HGF phenotype.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ceb9b587ffa6a5bef5fd854ccd0b8319