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Clinical Variability of Waardenburg-Shah Syndrome in Patients With Proximal 13q Deletion Syndrome Including the Endothelin-B Receptor Locus

Tuysuz, Beyhan ; Collin, Anna LU ; Arapoglu, Muejde and Suyugul, Nezir (2009) In American Journal of Medical Genetics. Part A 149A(10). p.2290-2295
Abstract
Waardenburg-Shah syndrome (Waardenburg syndrome type IV-WS4) is an auditory-pigmentary disorder that combines clinical features of pigmentary abnormalities of the skin, hair and irides, sensorineural hearing loss, and Hirschsprung disease (HSCR). Mutations in the endothelin-B receptor (EDNRB) gene on 13q22 have been found to cause this syndrome. Mutations in both alleles cause the full phenotype, while heterozygous mutations cause isolated HSCR or HSCR with minor pigmentary anomalies and/or sensorineural deafness. We investigated the status of the EDNRB gene, by FISH analysis, in three patients with de novo proximal 13q deletions detected at cytogenetic analysis and examined the clinical variability of WS4 among these patients. Chromosome... (More)
Waardenburg-Shah syndrome (Waardenburg syndrome type IV-WS4) is an auditory-pigmentary disorder that combines clinical features of pigmentary abnormalities of the skin, hair and irides, sensorineural hearing loss, and Hirschsprung disease (HSCR). Mutations in the endothelin-B receptor (EDNRB) gene on 13q22 have been found to cause this syndrome. Mutations in both alleles cause the full phenotype, while heterozygous mutations cause isolated HSCR or HSCR with minor pigmentary anomalies and/or sensorineural deafness. We investigated the status of the EDNRB gene, by FISH analysis, in three patients with de novo proximal 13q deletions detected at cytogenetic analysis and examined the clinical variability of WS4 among these patients. Chromosome 13q was screened with locus specific FISH probes and breakpoints were determined at 13q22.1q31.3 in Patients I and 3, and at 13q21.1q31.3 in Patient 2. An EDNRB specific FISH probe was deleted in all three patients. All patients had common facial features seen in proximal 13q deletion syndrome and mild mental retardation. However, findings related to WS4 were variable; Patient 1 had hypopigmentation of the irides and HSCR, Patient 2 had prominent bicolored irides and mild bilateral hearing loss, and Patient 3 had only mild unilateral hearing loss. These data contribute new insights into the pathogenesis of WS4. (C) 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc. (Less)
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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Waardenburg-Shah syndrome, 13q deletion, Hirschsprung disease, EDNRB, clinical variability
in
American Journal of Medical Genetics. Part A
volume
149A
issue
10
pages
2290 - 2295
publisher
John Wiley & Sons Inc.
external identifiers
  • wos:000270745000038
  • scopus:70349503633
ISSN
1552-4825
DOI
10.1002/ajmg.a.33031
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
84247f58-38de-419d-8084-c493f1424394 (old id 1507678)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 11:56:58
date last changed
2022-01-26 20:38:22
@article{84247f58-38de-419d-8084-c493f1424394,
  abstract     = {{Waardenburg-Shah syndrome (Waardenburg syndrome type IV-WS4) is an auditory-pigmentary disorder that combines clinical features of pigmentary abnormalities of the skin, hair and irides, sensorineural hearing loss, and Hirschsprung disease (HSCR). Mutations in the endothelin-B receptor (EDNRB) gene on 13q22 have been found to cause this syndrome. Mutations in both alleles cause the full phenotype, while heterozygous mutations cause isolated HSCR or HSCR with minor pigmentary anomalies and/or sensorineural deafness. We investigated the status of the EDNRB gene, by FISH analysis, in three patients with de novo proximal 13q deletions detected at cytogenetic analysis and examined the clinical variability of WS4 among these patients. Chromosome 13q was screened with locus specific FISH probes and breakpoints were determined at 13q22.1q31.3 in Patients I and 3, and at 13q21.1q31.3 in Patient 2. An EDNRB specific FISH probe was deleted in all three patients. All patients had common facial features seen in proximal 13q deletion syndrome and mild mental retardation. However, findings related to WS4 were variable; Patient 1 had hypopigmentation of the irides and HSCR, Patient 2 had prominent bicolored irides and mild bilateral hearing loss, and Patient 3 had only mild unilateral hearing loss. These data contribute new insights into the pathogenesis of WS4. (C) 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.}},
  author       = {{Tuysuz, Beyhan and Collin, Anna and Arapoglu, Muejde and Suyugul, Nezir}},
  issn         = {{1552-4825}},
  keywords     = {{Waardenburg-Shah syndrome; 13q deletion; Hirschsprung disease; EDNRB; clinical variability}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{10}},
  pages        = {{2290--2295}},
  publisher    = {{John Wiley & Sons Inc.}},
  series       = {{American Journal of Medical Genetics. Part A}},
  title        = {{Clinical Variability of Waardenburg-Shah Syndrome in Patients With Proximal 13q Deletion Syndrome Including the Endothelin-B Receptor Locus}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.a.33031}},
  doi          = {{10.1002/ajmg.a.33031}},
  volume       = {{149A}},
  year         = {{2009}},
}