A Boy with Holt-Oram Syndrome Caused by Novel Mutation c.1304delT in the TBX5 Gene.
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ABSTRACT: Holt-Oram syndrome (HOS) is an autosomal dominant developmental defect involving preaxial radial ray upper limb deformity and variable cardiac defects. It has been demonstrated that HOS is caused by mutations in the T-box transcription factor gene TBX5. Numerous germline mutations (more than 60) of this gene produce preterminal stop codons, which lead to synthesis of a truncated nonfunctional TBX5 protein. The haplo-insufficiency of the TBX5 gene is the most significant cause of HOS. We report on a sporadic patient with clinical features of HOS. Our patient had a cardiac anomaly - a muscular ventricular and atrial septal defect, patent ductus arteriosus and a conduction defect (a first-step atrioventricular block). Upper limb anomalies in our patient were relatively mild and unusual to HOS - distally displaced thumbs, narrow shoulders and hypotrophy of the muscles in the shoulder region. Molecular analysis identified a novel and unusual heterozygous frameshift mutation - c.1304delT (p.Leu435fsX146) - in exon 9 of the TBX5 gene, which is predicted to cause an elongated TBX5 protein with 84 miscoding amino acids and 62 supernumerary C-terminal amino acids. To the best of our knowledge, only one such type of elongation mutation has thus far been reported in the TBX5 gene.
SUBMITTER: Muru K
PROVIDER: S-EPMC3214961 | biostudies-literature | 2011 Sep
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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