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Novel TMEM67 mutations and genotype-phenotype correlates in meckelin-related ciliopathies

✍ Scribed by Miriam Iannicelli; Francesco Brancati; Soumaya Mougou-Zerelli; Annalisa Mazzotta; Sophie Thomas; Nadia Elkhartoufi; Lorena Travaglini; Céline Gomes; Gian Luigi Ardissino; Enrico Bertini; Eugen Boltshauser; Pierangela Castorina; Stefano D'Arrigo; Rita Fischetto; Brigitte Leroy; Philippe Loget; Maryse Bonnière; Lena Starck; Julia Tantau; Barbara Gentilin; Silvia Majore; Dominika Swistun; Elizabeth Flori; Faustina Lalatta; Chiara Pantaleoni; Johannes Penzien; Paola Grammatico; the International JSRD Study Group; Bruno Dallapiccola; Joseph G. Gleeson; Tania Attie-Bitach; Enza Maria Valente


Book ID
102266375
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
227 KB
Volume
31
Category
Article
ISSN
1059-7794

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✦ Synopsis


Human ciliopathies are hereditary conditions caused by defects of proteins expressed at the primary cilium. Among ciliopathies, Joubert syndrome and related disorders (JSRD), Meckel syndrome (MKS) and nephronophthisis (NPH) present clinical and genetic overlap, being allelic at several loci. One of the most interesting gene is TMEM67, encoding the transmembrane protein meckelin. We performed mutation analysis of TMEM67 in 341 probands, including 265 JSRD representative of all clinical subgroups and 76 MKS fetuses. We identified 33 distinct mutations, of which 20 were novel, in 8/10 (80%) JS with liver involvement (COACH phenotype) and 12/76 (16%) MKS fetuses. No mutations were found in other JSRD subtypes, confirming the strong association between TMEM67 mutations and liver involvement. Literature review of all published TMEM67 mutated cases was performed to delineate genotype-phenotype correlates. In particular, comparison of the types of mutations and their distribution along the gene in lethal versus non lethal phenotypes showed in MKS patients a significant enrichment of missense mutations falling in TMEM67 exons 8 to 15, especially when in combination with a truncating mutation. These exons encode for a region of unknown function in the extracellular domain of meckelin.


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