Gene diagnosis is essential for confident presymptomatic prediction, genetic counseling, and early management of hereditary retinoblastoma. In screening the leukocyte DNA of three patients with bilateral retinoblastoma for RB1-gene heterozygous germline mutations, we identified mutations involving exon 3 or 18 of the RB1 gene by using heteroduplex analysis and sequencing. In one case the mutation was a 2 bp GT deletion resulting in the loss of the exon 18 splicing-donor; another mutation was a G-to-T transversion at codon 580 in exon 18, which converts Arg to a stop codon. The third mutation involved in 1 bp deletion at codon 96 in exon 3, which leads to a premature stop codon at codon 110. We used information from this heteroduplex technique for genetic counseling and presymptomatic prediction. A newborn was identified as normal, using gene diagnosis; his 15-month follow-up confirmed our prediction.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

genetic counseling
12
heteroduplex analysis
8
gene diagnosis
8
presymptomatic prediction
8
codon
5
mutation
4
mutation detection
4
detection genetic
4
counseling retinoblastoma
4
retinoblastoma heteroduplex
4

Similar Publications

Background: ALG8-congenital disorder of glycosylation (ALG8-CDG) is a rare inherited metabolic disorder leading to severe multisystem manifestations, with no reported prenatal patients to date.

Methods: We describe two fetuses from a single family with ALG8-CDG presenting with prenatal hydrops, undergoing comprehensive prenatal ultrasound, umbilical cord blood biochemistry, autopsy, placental pathology, and genetic testing.

Results: Prenatal ultrasound revealed fetal hydrops, skeletal anomalies, cardiac developmental abnormalities, cataracts, echogenic kidneys and bowel, oligohydramnios, choroid plexus cysts, and intrauterine growth restriction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Advanced-stage atypical carcinoid tumors are seldom seen in the teenaged population. Comprehensive care, extending beyond mere cancer treatment, is essential. A 16-year-old boy received a diagnosis of a 13-mm nodule in the left S lung segment with signs suggesting interlobar pleural indentation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We present the case of a 72-year-old man diagnosed with an aortic root aneurysm who was then diagnosed with Marfan syndrome. The patient suffered an intraoperative type B dissection with lower extremity malperfusion managed with an axillary-bifemoral extra-anatomic bypass.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia.

Nat Rev Dis Primers

January 2025

European Reference Network for Rare Multisystemic Vascular Disease (VASCERN), HHT Rare Disease Working Group, Paris, France.

Hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) is a vascular dysplasia inherited as an autosomal dominant trait and caused by loss-of-function pathogenic variants in genes encoding proteins of the BMP signalling pathway. Up to 90% of disease-causal variants are observed in ENG and ACVRL1, with SMAD4 and GDF2 less frequently responsible for HHT. In adults, the most frequent HHT manifestations relate to iron deficiency and anaemia owing to recurrent epistaxis (nosebleeds) or bleeding from gastrointestinal telangiectases.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Li-Fraumeni syndrome: a germline splice variant reveals a novel physiological alternative transcript.

J Med Genet

January 2025

Univ Rouen Normandie, Inserm U1245, Normandie Univ, CHU Rouen, Department of Genetics, F-76000, Rouen, France

Background: Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS) predisposes individuals to a wide range of cancers from childhood onwards, underscoring the crucial need for accurate interpretation of germline variants for optimal clinical management of patients and families. Several unclassified variants, particularly those potentially affecting splicing, require specialised testing. One such example is the NM_000546.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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!