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Complex rearrangement of the exon 6 genomic region among Opitz G/BBB Syndrome MID1 alterations
Authors:Chiara Migliore  Emmanouil Athanasakis  Sophie Dahoun  Ambroise Wonkam  Melissa Lees  Olga Calabrese  Fiona Connell  Sally Ann Lynch  Claudia Izzi  Eva Pompilii  Seema Thakur  Merel van Maarle  Louise C. Wilson  Germana Meroni
Affiliation:1. State Key Laboratory of Experimental Hematology, Institute of Hematology and Blood Disease Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Tianjin, P.R. China;2. Department of Hematology, Department of Hematology, HeNan Cancer Hospital and the Affiliated Cancer Hospital of Zhengzhou University, HeNan, China;3. Department of Hematology, Tianjin First Center Hospital, Tianjin, China;1. Immunology Department, Great Ormond Street Hospital, Great Ormond Street, London WC1N 3JH, UK;2. Paediatric Centre for Hepatology, Gastroenterology and Nutrition, King''s College Hospital, Denmark Hill, London SE5 9RS, UK
Abstract:Opitz G/BBB Syndrome (OS) is a multiple congenital anomaly disorder characterized by developmental defects of midline structures. The most relevant clinical signs are ocular hypertelorism, hypospadias, cleft lip and palate, laryngo-tracheo-esophageal abnormalities, imperforate anus, and cardiac defects. Developmental delay, intellectual disability and brain abnormalities are also present. The X-linked form of this disorder is caused by mutations in the MID1 gene coding for a member of the tripartite motif family of E3 ubiquitin ligases. Here, we describe 12 novel patients that carry MID1 mutations emphasizing that laryngo-tracheo-esophageal defects are very common in OS patients and, together with hypertelorism and hypospadias, are the most frequent findings among the full spectrum of OS clinical manifestations. Besides missense and nonsense mutations, small insertions and deletions scattered along the entire length of the gene, we found that a consistent number of MID1 alterations are represented by the deletion of single coding exons. Deep characterization of one of these deletions reveals, for the first time within the MID1 gene, a complex rearrangement composed of two deletions, an inversion and a small insertion that may suggest the involvement of concurrent non-homologous mechanisms in the generation of the observed structural variant.
Keywords:Midline defects  Opitz G/BBB Syndrome  Structural variants  X-chromosome
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