Molecular dissection of isolated disease features in mosaic neurofibromatosis type 1

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Molecular dissection of isolated disease features in mosaic neurofibromatosis type 1
المؤلفون: Jo Vandesompele, Sofie De Schepper, Ludwine Messiaen, Sandra Janssens, Eric Legius, Ophélia Maertens, Franki Speleman, Ine Heyns, Hilde Brems
المصدر: American journal of human genetics. 81(2)
سنة النشر: 2007
مصطلحات موضوعية: Adult, Male, Cell type, congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities, Neurofibromatosis 1, Adolescent, Somatic cell, Loss of Heterozygosity, Biology, medicine.disease_cause, Article, Genes, Neurofibromatosis 1, medicine, Genetics, Neurofibroma, Humans, Genetics(clinical), Neurofibromatosis, neoplasms, Genetics (clinical), Pigmentation disorder, Skin, Legius syndrome, Mutation, Mosaicism, Middle Aged, medicine.disease, Phenotype, eye diseases, nervous system diseases, NF1, Melanocytes, Female, Pigmentation Disorders, Von Recklinghausen
الوصف: Elucidation of the biological framework underlying the development of neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1)-related symptoms has proved to be difficult. Complicating factors include the large size of the NF1 gene, the presence of several NF1 pseudogenes, the complex interactions between cell types, and the NF1-haploinsufficient state of all cells in the body. Here, we investigate three patients with distinct NF1-associated clinical manifestations (neurofibromas only, pigmentary changes only, and association of both symptoms). For each patient, various tissues and cell types were tested with comprehensive and quantitative assays capable of detecting low-percentage NF1 mutations. This approach confirmed the biallelic NF1 inactivation in Schwann cells in neurofibromas and, for the first time, demonstrated biallelic NF1 inactivation in melanocytes in NF1-related cafe-au-lait macules. Interestingly, both disease features arise even within a background of predominantly NF1 wild-type cells. Together, the data provide molecular evidence that (1) the distinct clinical picture of the patients is due to mosaicism for the NF1 mutation and (2) the mosaic phenotype reflects the embryonic timing and, accordingly, the neural crest-derived cell type involved in the somatic NF1 mutation. The study of the affected cell types provides important insight into developmental concepts underlying particular NF1-related disease features and opens avenues for improved diagnosis and genetic counseling of individuals with mosaic NF1. ispartof: American Journal of Human Genetics vol:81 issue:2 pages:243-251 ispartof: location:United States status: published
وصف الملف: Print-Electronic; application/pdf
تدمد: 0002-9297
الوصول الحر: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::422857e00f7d112ecb7d0f44a7c6e97eTest
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17668375Test
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الانضمام: edsair.doi.dedup.....422857e00f7d112ecb7d0f44a7c6e97e
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE