The Brain-Lung-Thyroid syndrome (BLTS): A novel deletion in chromosome 14q13.2-q21.1 expands the phenotype to humoral immunodeficiency.

Eur J Med Genet

Thyroid Molecular Laboratory, Institute for Medical and Molecular Genetics (INGEMM), IdiPAZ, La Paz University Hospital, Autonomous University of Madrid, Madrid, Spain; CIBERER, Biomedical Research Center in Rare Diseases Network, ISCIII, Madrid, Spain. Electronic address:

Published: July 2018

Genetic defects of NKX2-1 are classically associated with hypothyroidism, benign chorea and neonatal respiratory distress. The purpose of this study was to identify the genetic pathogenesis of the "NKX2-1 triad" in a 10 year-old female presenting additional features barely described in the disorder. In the neonatal period, she presented with generalized hypotonia and respiratory distress, with later episodes of frequent wheezing. At 3 month-age developmental dysplasia of the hip was diagnosed and at 10 months, primary hypothyroidism was detected and treated. Subsequently, delayed achievement of developmental milestones and then subtle choreic movements of extremities were identified at 2 years of age. Furthermore, delayed teeth eruption and agenesis of some dental pieces, short stature and joint hyperlaxity were also noticed. At 10 years, a poor immune response to polysaccharide antigens and hypogammaglobulinemia, including all IgG subclasses were detected. Surprisingly, no mutations were identified in the complete coding region of NKX2-1 by PCR and Sanger sequencing. MLPA showed a de novo loss of gene dosage in all 3 probes located in NKX2-1 exons. A CGH-array identified a deletion of 3.32 Mb in chromosome 14q13.2-q21.1 containing 20 genes, including NKX2-1, PAX9 and two candidate genes (NFKB1A and PPP2R3C) involved in immune response. The Brain-Lung-Thyroid syndrome (OMIM#610978; ORPHA:209905) associated with other clinical phenotypes should suggest monoallelic deletions of chromosome 14 causing haploinsufficiency of NKX2-1, and other contiguous genes like PAX9 (hypodontia) or other dosage-sensitive genes in the chromosomal vicinity that emerge as candidates for hypogammaglobulinemia, mainly NFKBIA.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejmg.2018.02.007DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

brain-lung-thyroid syndrome
8
chromosome 14q132-q211
8
respiratory distress
8
immune response
8
nkx2-1
5
syndrome blts
4
blts novel
4
novel deletion
4
deletion chromosome
4
14q132-q211 expands
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!