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Clinical manifestations in patients with SOS1 mutations range from Noonan syndrome to CFC syndrome
Authors:Yoko Narumi  Yoko Aoki  Tetsuya Niihori  Masahiro Sakurai  Hélène Cavé  Alain Verloes  Kimio Nishio  Hirofumi Ohashi  Kenji Kurosawa  Nobuhiko Okamoto  Hiroshi Kawame  Seiji Mizuno  Tatsuro Kondoh  Marie-Claude Addor  Anne Coeslier-Dieux  Catherine Vincent-Delorme  Koichi Tabayashi  Masashi Aoki  Tomoko Kobayashi  Afag Guliyeva  Shigeo Kure  Yoichi Matsubara
Affiliation:Department of Medical Genetics, Tohoku University School of Medicine, 1-1 Seiryo-machi, Sendai, 980-8574, Japan.
Abstract:Noonan syndrome (NS) and cardio-facio-cutaneous (CFC) syndrome are autosomal dominant disorders characterized by heart defects, facial dysmorphism, ectodermal abnormalities, and mental retardation. There is a significant clinical overlap between NS and CFC syndrome, but ectodermal abnormalities and mental retardation are more frequent in CFC syndrome. Mutations in PTPN11 and KRAS have been identified in patients with NS and those in KRAS, BRAF and MAP2K1/2 have been identified in patients with CFC syndrome, establishing a new role of the RAS/MAPK pathway in human development. Recently, mutations in the son of sevenless gene (SOS1) have also been identified in patients with NS. To clarify the clinical spectrum of patients with SOS1 mutations, we analyzed 24 patients with NS, including 3 patients in a three-generation family, and 30 patients with CFC syndrome without PTPN11, KRAS, HRAS, BRAF, and MAP2K1/2 (MEK1/2) mutations. We identified two SOS1 mutations in four NS patients, including three patients in the above-mentioned three-generation family. In the patients with a CFC phenotype, three mutations, including a novel three amino-acid insertion, were identified in one CFC patient and two patients with both NS and CFC phenotypes. These three patients exhibited ectodermal abnormalities, such as curly hair, sparse eyebrows, and dry skin, and two of them showed mental retardation. Our results suggest that patients with SOS1 mutations range from NS to CFC syndrome.
Keywords:PTPN11  RAS  Noonan syndrome  Cardio-facio-cutaneous syndrome  RAF
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