AI Article Synopsis

  • - The cutis laxa syndromes are a group of disorders characterized by loose, wrinkled skin and involve various genetic mutations related to elastic fiber formation.
  • - This report focuses on three patients with a specific rare disorder known as Lenz-Majewski syndrome (LMS), marked by unique symptoms like facial dysmorphism, severe growth retardation, and intellectual disability, linked to mutations in the PTDSS1 gene.
  • - The study highlights LMS as a clear example of a cutis laxa syndrome and notes distinctive early signs such as brachydactyly, emphasizing the need for further research on the connection between the PTDSS1 gene and the body's extracellular matrix structure.

Article Abstract

The cutis laxa syndromes are multisystem disorders that share loose redundant inelastic and wrinkled skin as a common hallmark clinical feature. The underlying molecular defects are heterogeneous and 13 different genes have been involved until now, all of them being implicated in elastic fiber assembly. We provide here molecular and clinical characterization of three unrelated patients with a very rare phenotype associating cutis laxa, facial dysmorphism, severe growth retardation, hyperostotic skeletal dysplasia, and intellectual disability. This disorder called Lenz-Majewski syndrome (LMS) is associated with gain of function mutations in PTDSS1, encoding an enzyme involved in phospholipid biosynthesis. This report illustrates that LMS is an unequivocal cutis laxa syndrome and expands the clinical and molecular spectrum of this group of disorders. In the neonatal period, brachydactyly and facial dysmorphism are two early distinctive signs, later followed by intellectual disability and hyperostotic skeletal dysplasia with severe dwarfism allowing differentiation of this condition from other cutis laxa phenotypes. Further studies are needed to understand the link between PTDSS1 and extra cellular matrix assembly.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5838527PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.a.38604DOI Listing

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