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Autosomal dominant frontometaphyseal dysplasia: Delineation of the clinical phenotype.

Emma M WadeZandra A JenkinsPhilip B DanielTim MorganMarie C AddorLesley C AdésDebora BertolaAxel BohringErin CarterTae-Joon ChoChrista M de GeusHans-Christoph DubaElaine FletcherKinga HadzsievRaoul C M HennekamChong A KimDeborah KrakowEva MoravaTeresa NeuhannDavid SillenceAndrea Superti-FurgaHermine E Veenstra-KnolDagmar WieczorekLouise C WilsonDavid M MarkieStephen P Robertson
Published in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2017)
Frontometaphyseal dysplasia (FMD) is caused by gain-of-function mutations in the X-linked gene FLNA in approximately 50% of patients. Recently we characterized an autosomal dominant form of FMD (AD-FMD) caused by mutations in MAP3K7, which accounts for the condition in the majority of patients who lack a FLNA mutation. We previously also described a patient with a de novo variant in TAB2, which we hypothesized was causative of another form of AD-FMD. In this study, a cohort of 20 individuals with AD-FMD is clinically evaluated. This cohort consists of 15 individuals with the recently described, recurrent mutation (c.1454C>T) in MAP3K7, as well as three individuals with missense mutations that result in substitutions in the N-terminal kinase domain of TGFβ-activated kinase 1 (TAK1), encoded by MAP3K7. Additionally, two individuals have missense variants in the gene TAB2, which encodes a protein with a close functional relationship to TAK1, TAK1-associated binding protein 2 (TAB2). Although the X-linked and autosomal dominant forms of FMD are very similar, there are distinctions to be made between the two conditions. Individuals with AD-FMD have characteristic facial features, and are more likely to be deaf, have scoliosis and cervical fusions, and have a cleft palate. Furthermore, there are features only found in AD-FMD in our review of the literature including valgus deformity of the feet and predisposition to keloid scarring. Finally, intellectual disability is present in a small number of subjects with AD-FMD but has not been described in association with X-linked FMD.
Keyphrases
  • intellectual disability
  • binding protein
  • copy number
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • newly diagnosed
  • genome wide
  • ejection fraction
  • case report
  • tyrosine kinase
  • peritoneal dialysis
  • patient reported
  • soft tissue