What Is the Exact Contribution of PITX1 and TBX4 Genes in Clubfoot Development? An Italian Study

Congenital clubfoot is a common pediatric malformation that affects approximately 0.1% of all births. 80% of the cases appear isolated, while 20% can be secondary or associated with complex syndromes. To date, two genes that appear to play an important role are and , but their actual impact is still...

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Veröffentlicht in:Genes 2022-10, Vol.13 (11), p.1958
Hauptverfasser: Bianco, Anna Monica, Ragusa, Giulia, Di Carlo, Valentina, Faletra, Flavio, Di Stazio, Mariateresa, Racano, Costantina, Trisolino, Giovanni, Cappellani, Stefania, De Pellegrin, Maurizio, d'Addetta, Ignazio, Carluccio, Giuseppe, Monforte, Sergio, Andreacchio, Antonio, Dibello, Daniela, d'Adamo, Adamo P
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Congenital clubfoot is a common pediatric malformation that affects approximately 0.1% of all births. 80% of the cases appear isolated, while 20% can be secondary or associated with complex syndromes. To date, two genes that appear to play an important role are and , but their actual impact is still unclear. Our study aimed to evaluate the prevalence of pathogenic variants in and in Italian patients with idiopathic clubfoot. and genes were analyzed by sequence and SNP array in 162 patients. We detected only four nucleotide variants in , predicted to be benign or likely benign. CNV analysis did not reveal duplications or deletions involving both genes and intragenic structural variants. Our data proved that the idiopathic form of congenital clubfoot was rarely associated with mutations and CNVs on and . Although in some patients, the disease was caused by mutations in both genes; they were responsible for only a tiny minority of cases, at least in the Italian population. It was not excluded that other genes belonging to the same axis were involved, even if genetic complexity at the origin of clubfoot required the involvement of other factors.
ISSN:2073-4425
2073-4425
DOI:10.3390/genes13111958