Spondylo-epiphyseal dysplasia, Maroteaux type (pseudo-Morquio syndrome type 2), and parastremmatic dysplasia are caused by TRPV4 mutations.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_2728B0DA55CA
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Spondylo-epiphyseal dysplasia, Maroteaux type (pseudo-Morquio syndrome type 2), and parastremmatic dysplasia are caused by TRPV4 mutations.
Journal
American Journal of Medical Genetics. Part A
Author(s)
Nishimura G., Dai J., Lausch E., Unger S., Megarbané A., Kitoh H., Kim O.H., Cho T.J., Bedeschi F., Benedicenti F., Mendoza-Londono R., Silengo M., Schmidt-Rimpler M., Spranger J., Zabel B., Ikegawa S., Superti-Furga A.
ISSN
1552-4833 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1552-4825
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2010
Volume
152A
Number
6
Pages
1443-1449
Language
english
Abstract
Recent discoveries have established the existence of a family of skeletal dysplasias caused by dominant mutations in TRPV4. This family comprises, in order of increasing severity, dominant brachyolmia, spondylo-metaphyseal dysplasia Kozlowski type, and metatropic dysplasia. We tested the hypothesis that a further condition, Spondylo-epiphyseal dysplasia (SED), Maroteaux type (MIM 184095; also known as pseudo-Morquio syndrome type 2), could be caused by TRPV4 mutations. We analyzed six individuals with Maroteaux type SED, including three who had previously been reported. All six patients were found to have heterozygous TRPV4 mutations; three patients had unreported mutations, while three patients had mutations previously described in association with metatropic dysplasia. In addition, we tested one individual with a distinct rare disorder, parastremmatic dysplasia (MIM 168400). This patient had a common, recurrent mutation seen in several patients with Kozlowski type spondylo-metaphyseal dysplasia. We conclude that SED Maroteaux type and parastremmatic dysplasia are part of the TRPV4 dysplasia family and that TRPV4 mutations show considerable variability in phenotypic expression resulting in distinct clinical-radiographic phenotypes.
Keywords
Adult, Child, Female, Genetic Variation, Humans, Male, Mucopolysaccharidosis II/genetics, Mucopolysaccharidosis II/radiography, Mutation, Osteochondrodysplasias/genetics, Osteochondrodysplasias/radiography, Pedigree, TRPV Cation Channels/genetics
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
14/03/2011 17:09
Last modification date
20/08/2019 14:06
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