Login / Signup

Heterozygous pathogenic variants in GLI1 are a common finding in isolated postaxial polydactyly A/B.

Adrián Palencia-CamposMaría-Luisa Martínez-FernándezUmut AltunogluPatricia Soto-BielickaAntonio TorresPurificación MarínElena AllerLeyli ŞentürkÖmer BerközMehmet YıldıranHülya KayseriliElena Gil-CamareroGloria Colli-ListaAmparo Sanchís-CalvoAlba Carreteronull nullEncarna Guillén-NavarroVanesa López-GonzálezMaría Ballesta-MartínezJordi RosellMona S AglanSamia TemtamyGhada A OtaifyLourdes Cuevas-CatalinaMaría-Nieves Torres-SaavedraJulian NevadoJair TenorioPablo LapunzinaEva Bermejo-SánchezVictor L Ruiz-Perez
Published in: Human mutation (2019)
Postaxial polydactyly (PAP) is a frequent limb malformation consisting in the duplication of the fifth digit of the hand or foot. Morphologically, this condition is divided into type A and B, with PAP-B corresponding to a more rudimentary extra-digit. Recently, biallelic truncating variants in the transcription factor GLI1 were reported to be associated with a recessive disorder, which in addition to PAP-A, may include syndromic features. Moreover, two heterozygous subjects carrying only one inactive copy of GLI1 were also identified with PAP. Herein, we aimed to determine the level of involvement of GLI1 in isolated PAP, a condition previously established to be autosomal dominantly inherited with incomplete penetrance. We analyzed the coding region of GLI1 in 95 independent probands with nonsyndromic PAP and found 11.57% of these subjects with single heterozygous pathogenic variants in this gene. The detected variants lead to premature termination codons or result in amino acid changes in the DNA-binding domain of GLI1 that diminish its transactivation activity. Family segregation analysis of these variants was consistent with dominant inheritance with incomplete penetrance. We conclude that heterozygous changes in GLI1 underlie a significant proportion of sporadic or familial cases of isolated PAP-A/B.
Keyphrases
  • copy number
  • early onset
  • dna binding
  • transcription factor
  • mitochondrial dna
  • intellectual disability
  • amino acid
  • late onset
  • dna methylation
  • gene expression
  • autism spectrum disorder