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Variable expressivity and incomplete penetrance in a large family with non-classical Diamond-Blackfan anemia associated with ribosomal protein L11 splicing variant.

Colleen M CarlstonZeinab A AfifyJanice C PalumbosHeidi BagleyCarlos BarbagelataWhitney L Wooderchak-DonahueRong MaoJohn C Carey
Published in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2017)
Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) is a group of clinically and genetically heterogeneous bone marrow failure disorders with or without congenital anomalies. Variable expressivity and incomplete penetrance have been observed within affected families. Diamond-Blackfan anemia-7 (DBA7), caused by heterozygous mutations in ribosomal protein L11 (RPL11), accounts for approximately 5% of DBA. DBA7 is usually characterized by early-onset bone marrow failure often accompanied by congenital malformations, especially thumb defects. Here, we present the case of a 2-year-old boy with chronic mild normocytic anemia, short stature, bilateral underdevelopment of the thumbs, atrial septal defect, and hypospadias. Hematological testing revealed slightly decreased hematocrit and hemoglobin, normal HbF, and elevated eADA. Family history included maternal relatives with thumb defects, but the mother's thumbs were normal. Clinical exome sequencing detected a maternally-inherited RPL11 variant, c.396+3A>G, that is predicted to affect splicing. A family correlation study of the identified variant demonstrates segregation with thumb anomalies in the mother's family. RNA studies suggest that the variant produces an alternative transcript that is likely susceptible to nonsense-mediated decay. This report summarizes the prevalence of non-anemia findings in DBA7 and describes a non-classical familial presentation of DBA7 more associated with thumb anomalies than with anemia.
Keyphrases
  • early onset
  • iron deficiency
  • chronic kidney disease
  • bone marrow
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • late onset
  • single cell
  • risk factors
  • heart failure
  • gene expression
  • body mass index
  • atrial fibrillation
  • amino acid
  • genome wide