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Extending the clinical and genetic spectrum of ARID2 related intellectual disability. A case series of 7 patients
Authors:Gabriella Gazdagh  Moira Blyth  Ingrid Scurr  Peter D. Turnpenny  Sarju G. Mehta  Ruth Armstrong  Meriel McEntagart  Ruth Newbury-Ecob  Edward S. Tobias  Shelagh Joss
Affiliation:1. West of Scotland Regional Genetics Service, Laboratory Medicine Building, Queen Elizabeth University Hospital, Glasgow, United Kingdom;2. Yorkshire Regional Genetics Service, Department of Clinical Genetics, Chapel Allerton Hospital, Leeds, United Kingdom;3. Bristol Clinical Genetics Service, St Michael''s Hospital, Bristol, United Kingdom;4. Clinical Genetics Department, Royal Devon and Exeter NHS Foundation Trust, Exeter, United Kingdom;5. Department of Clinical Genetics, Addenbrookes Hospital, Cambridge, United Kingdom;6. South West Thames Regional Genetics Service, St. George''s Hospital, London, United Kingdom;7. Academic Unit of Medical Genetics and Clinical Pathology, School of Medicine, College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom;8. Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Wellcome Trust Genome Campus, Hinxton, Cambridge, United Kingdom
Abstract:In the last 3 years de novo sequence variants in the ARID2 (AT-rich interaction domain 2) gene, a subunit of the SWI/SNF complex, have been linked to intellectual disabilities in 3 case reports including one which describes frameshift mutations in ARID2 in 2 patients with features resembling Coffin-Siris syndrome.Coffin-Siris syndrome (CSS) is a rare congenital syndrome characterized by intellectual deficit, coarse facial features and hypoplastic or absent fifth fingernails and/or toenails among other features. Mutations in a number of different genes encoding SWI/SNF chromatin remodelling complex proteins have been described but the underlying molecular cause remains unknown in approximately 40% of patients with CSS.Here we describe 7 unrelated individuals, 2 with deletions of the ARID2 region and 5 with de novo truncating mutations in the ARID2 gene. Similarities to CSS are evident. Although hypertrichosis and hypoplasia of the fifth finger nail and distal phalanx do not appear to be common in these patients, toenail hypoplasia and the presence of Wormian bones might support the involvement of ARID2.
Keywords:ARID2  Coffin-siris syndrome  DDD study  Genetic association  Intellectual disability
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