Mosaicism for GNAS methylation defects associated with pseudohypoparathyroidism type 1B arose in early post-zygotic phases.
Francesca Marta ElliPaolo BordognaMaura ArosioAnna SpadaGiovanna MantovaniPublished in: Clinical epigenetics (2018)
Our data showed no differences of methylation levels between organs and tissues from the same patient, so we concluded that the epimutation occurred in early post-zygotic phases and that the partial defects were mosaics. The number of patients with no detectable (epi)genetic GNAS defects was too small to exclude epimutations occurring in later post-zygotic phases, affecting only selected tissues different from blood, thus leading to underdiagnosis during routine molecular diagnosis. Finally, we found no correlation between methylation ratios, representing the proportion of epimutated cells, and the clinical presentation, further confirming the hypothesis of a threshold effect of the GNAS loss of imprinting leading to an "all-or-none" phenotype.