14 research outputs found

    Disruption of ST5 is associated with mental-retardation and multiple congenital anomalies

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    We observed a patient with a cryptic subtelomeric de novo balanced translocation 46,XY.ish t(11;20)(p15.4;q13.2) presenting with severe mental retardation, muscular hypotonia, seizures, bilateral sensorineural hearing loss, submucous cleft palate, persistent ductus Botalli, unilateral cystic kidney dysplasia and frequent infections. Fluorescence in situ hybridization mapping and sequencing of the translocation breakpoints showed that no known genes are disrupted at 20q13.2 and that ST5 (suppression of tumorigenicity 5; MIM 140750) is disrupted on 11p15.4. By quantitative PCR from different human tissues we found ST5 relatively evenly expressed in fetal tissues. ST5 expression was more pronounced in adult brain, kidney and muscle than in the corresponding fetal tissues, whereas expression in other tissues was generally lower than in the fetal tissue. Using RNA in situ hybridization in mouse we found that St5 is expressed in the frontal cortex during embryonic development. In adult mouse brain expression of St5 was especially high in the hippocampal area and cerebellum. Hence we suppose that ST5 plays an important role in central nervous system development probably due to disturbance of DENN-domain mediated vesicle formation and neurotransmitter trafficking. Thus, our findings implicate ST5 in the etiology of mental retardation, seizures and multiple congenital anomalies

    Mutations in a Novel Factor, Glomulin, Are Responsible for Glomuvenous Malformations (“Glomangiomas”)

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    Glomuvenous malformations (GVMs) are cutaneous venous lesions characterized by the presence of smooth-muscle–like glomus cells in the media surrounding distended vascular lumens. We have shown that heritable GVMs link to a 4–6-cM region in chromosome 1p21-22. We also identified linkage disequilibrium that allowed a narrowing of this VMGLOM locus to 1.48 Mb. Herein, we report the identification of the mutated gene, glomulin, localized on the basis of the YAC and PAC maps. An incomplete cDNA sequence for glomulin had previously been designated “FAP48,” for “FKBP-associated protein of 48 kD.” The complete cDNA for glomulin contains an open reading frame of 1,785 nt encoding a predicted protein of 68 kD. The gene consists of 19 exons in which we identified 14 different germline mutations in patients with GVM. In addition, we found a somatic “second hit” mutation in affected tissue of a patient with an inherited genomic deletion. Since all but one of the mutations result in premature stop codons, and since the localized nature of the lesions could be explained by Knudson's two-hit model, GVMs are likely caused by complete loss of function of glomulin. The abnormal phenotype of vascular smooth-muscle cells (VSMCs) in GVMs suggests that glomulin plays an important role in differentiation of these cells—and, thereby, in vascular morphogenesis—especially in cutaneous veins

    Four common glomulin mutations cause two thirds of glomuvenous malformations ("familial glomangiomas"): evidence for a founder effect

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    Background: Glomuvenous malformation (GVM) ("familial glomangioma") is a localised cutaneous vascular lesion histologically characterised by abnormal smooth muscle-like "glomus cells" in the walls of distended endothelium lined channels. Inheritable GVM has been linked to chromosome 1p21-22 and is caused by truncating mutations in glomulin. A double hit mutation was identified in one lesion. This finding suggests that GVM results from complete localised loss of function and explains the paradominant mode of inheritance.Objective: To report on the identification of a mutation in glomulin in 23 additional families with GVM.Results: Three mutations are new; the others have been described previously. Among the 17 different inherited mutations in glomulin known up to now in 43 families, the 157delAAGAA mutation is the most common and was present in 21 families (48.8%). Mutation 108C->A was found in five families (11.8%), and the mutations 554delA+556delCCT and 1179delCAA were present together in two families (4.7% each). Polymorphic markers suggested a founder effect for all four mutations.Conclusions: Screening for these mutations should lead to a genetic diagnosis in about 70% of patients with inherited GVM. So far, a mutation in glomulin has been found in all GVM families tested, thus demonstrating locus homogeneity
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