Novel 14q32.2 paternal deletion encompassing the whole DLK1 gene associated with Temple syndrome.

Clin Epigenetics

Genetics Laboratory, Centre de Medicina Genòmica, Parc Taulí Hospital Universitari, Institut d'Investigació i Innovació Parc Taulí I3PT, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Sabadell, Spain.

Published: May 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Temple syndrome (TS14) is a rare genetic disorder caused by issues with parental gene expression, leading to developmental delays and growth problems in affected individuals.
  • A study on a 2-year-old girl showed symptoms like language delay, small stature, and early puberty, prompting genetic testing to pinpoint the underlying cause.
  • The genetic analysis revealed a deletion of the DLK1 gene from the father, resulting in abnormal gene methylation patterns that align with the clinical profile of Temple syndrome.

Article Abstract

Background: Temple syndrome (TS14) is a rare imprinting disorder caused by maternal UPD14, imprinting defects or paternal microdeletions which lead to an increase in the maternal expressed genes and a silencing the paternally expressed genes in the 14q32 imprinted domain. Classical TS14 phenotypic features include pre- and postnatal short stature, small hands and feet, muscular hypotonia, motor delay, feeding difficulties, weight gain, premature puberty along and precocious puberty.

Methods: An exon array comparative genomic hybridization was performed on a patient affected by psychomotor and language delay, muscular hypotonia, relative macrocephaly, and small hand and feet at two years old. At 6 years of age, the proband presented with precocious thelarche. Genes dosage and methylation within the 14q32 region were analyzed by MS-MLPA. Bisulfite PCR and pyrosequencing were employed to quantification methylation at the four known imprinted differentially methylated regions (DMR) within the 14q32 domain: DLK1 DMR, IG-DMR, MEG3 DMR and MEG8 DMR.

Results: The patient had inherited a 69 Kb deletion, encompassing the entire DLK1 gene, on the paternal allele. Relative hypermethylation of the two maternally methylated intervals, DLK1 and MEG8 DMRs, was observed along with normal methylation level at IG-DMR and MEG3 DMR, resulting in a phenotype consistent with TS14. Additional family members with the deletion showed modest methylation changes at both the DLK1 and MEG8 DMRs consistent with parental transmission.

Conclusion: We describe a girl with clinical presentation suggestive of Temple syndrome resulting from a small paternal 14q32 deletion that led to DLK1 whole-gene deletion, as well as hypermethylation of the maternally methylated DLK1-DMR.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11077747PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13148-024-01652-8DOI Listing

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