Login / Signup

A novel non-recurrent CNV deletion involving TBX4 and leaving TBX2 intact causes congenital alveolar dysplasia.

Katarzyna BzdęgaMateusz BielaGail H DeutschJoseph A KitzmillerMałgorzata RydzaniczPloski RafalJeffrey A WhitsettRobert ŚmigielJustyna A Karolak
Published in: Clinical genetics (2023)
Congenital alveolar dysplasia (CAD) belongs to rare lethal lung developmental disorders (LLDDs) in neonates, manifesting with acute respiratory failure and pulmonary arterial hypertension refractory to treatment. The majority of CAD cases have been associated with copy-number variant (CNV) deletions at 17q23.1q23.2 or 5p12. Most CNV deletions at 17q23.1q23.2 were recurrent and encompassed two closely located genes, TBX4 and TBX2. In a few CAD cases, intragenic frameshifting deletions or single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) involved TBX4 but not TBX2. Here, we describe a male neonate who died at 27 days of life from acute respiratory failure caused by lung growth arrest along the spectrum of CAD confirmed by histopathological assessment. Trio-based genome sequencing revealed in the proband a novel non-recurrent ~1.07 Mb heterozygous CNV deletion at 17q23.2, encompassing TBX4 that arose de novo on the paternal chromosome. This is the first report of a larger-sized CNV deletion in a CAD patient involving TBX4 and leaving TBX2 intact. Our results, together with previous reports, indicate that perturbations of TBX4, rather than TBX2, cause severe lung phenotypes in humans.
Keyphrases