Nonsyndromic craniosynostosis: novel coding variants

Background Craniosynostosis (CS), the premature fusion of one or more neurocranial sutures, is associated with approximately 200 syndromes; however, about 65–85% of patients present with no additional major birth defects. Methods We conducted targeted next-generation sequencing of 60 known syndromic...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pediatric research 2019-03, Vol.85 (4), p.463-468
Hauptverfasser: Sewda, Anshuman, White, Sierra R., Erazo, Monica, Hao, Ke, García-Fructuoso, Gemma, Fernández-Rodriguez, Ivette, Heuzé, Yann, Richtsmeier, Joan T., Romitti, Paul A., Reva, Boris, Jabs, Ethylin Wang, Peter, Inga
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Craniosynostosis (CS), the premature fusion of one or more neurocranial sutures, is associated with approximately 200 syndromes; however, about 65–85% of patients present with no additional major birth defects. Methods We conducted targeted next-generation sequencing of 60 known syndromic and other candidate genes in patients with sagittal nonsyndromic CS (sNCS, n  = 40) and coronal nonsyndromic CS (cNCS, n  = 19). Results We identified 18 previously published and 5 novel pathogenic variants, including three de novo variants. Novel variants included a paternally inherited c.2209C>G:p.(Leu737Val) variant in BBS9 of a patient with cNCS. Common variants in BBS9 , a gene required for ciliogenesis during cranial suture development, have been associated with sNCS risk in a previous genome-wide association study. We also identified c.313G>T:p.(Glu105*) variant in EFNB1 and c.435G>C:p.(Lys145Asn) variant in TWIST1 , both in patients with cNCS. Mutations in EFNB1 and TWIST1 have been linked to craniofrontonasal and Saethre–Chotzen syndrome, respectively; both present with coronal CS. Conclusions We provide additional evidence that variants in genes implicated in syndromic CS play a role in isolated CS, supporting their inclusion in genetic panels for screening patients with NCS. We also identified a novel BBS9 variant that further shows the potential involvement of BBS9 in the pathogenesis of CS.
ISSN:0031-3998
1530-0447
DOI:10.1038/s41390-019-0274-2