The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Meier–Gorlin syndrome genotype–phenotype studies: 35 individuals with pre-replication complex gene mutations and 10 without molecular diagnosis

Meier–Gorlin syndrome genotype–phenotype studies: 35 individuals with pre-replication complex gene mutations and 10 without molecular diagnosis
Meier–Gorlin syndrome genotype–phenotype studies: 35 individuals with pre-replication complex gene mutations and 10 without molecular diagnosis
Meier–Gorlin syndrome (MGS) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by microtia, patellar aplasia/hypoplasia, and short stature. Recently, mutations in five genes from the pre-replication complex (ORC1, ORC4, ORC6, CDT1, and CDC6), crucial in cell-cycle progression and growth, were identified in individuals with MGS. Here, we report on genotype–phenotype studies in 45 individuals with MGS (27 females, 18 males; age 3 months–47 years). Thirty-five individuals had biallelic mutations in one of the five causative pre-replication genes. No homozygous or compound heterozygous null mutations were detected. In 10 individuals, no definitive molecular diagnosis was made. The triad of microtia, absent/hypoplastic patellae, and short stature was observed in 82% of individuals with MGS. Additional frequent clinical features were mammary hypoplasia (100%) and abnormal genitalia (42%; predominantly cryptorchidism and hypoplastic labia minora/majora). One individual with ORC1 mutations only had short stature, emphasizing the highly variable clinical spectrum of MGS. Individuals with ORC1 mutations had significantly shorter stature and smaller head circumferences than individuals from other gene categories. Furthermore, compared with homozygous missense mutations, compound heterozygous mutations appeared to have a more severe effect on phenotype, causing more severe growth retardation in ORC4 and more frequently pulmonary emphysema in CDT1. A lethal phenotype was seen in four individuals with compound heterozygous ORC1 and CDT1 mutations. No other clear genotype–phenotype association was observed. Growth hormone and estrogen treatment may be of some benefit, respectively, to growth retardation and breast hypoplasia, though further studies in this patient group are needed.

1018-4813
598-606
de Munnik, Sonja A.
e4bbd604-c3e4-4093-8681-694e62c1bb42
Bicknell, Louise S.
9c95ab98-830f-44a8-b2fb-ac3df8bceec8
Aftimos, Salim
073edfb7-586a-4d1a-9606-f034e312706b
Al-Aama, Jumana Y.
3f22b763-6b8b-4cdf-a320-c17c7707a47e
van Bever, Yolande
66215e8b-337d-44eb-970f-b2289cef7ce2
Bober, Michael B.
e6dbfd9b-ba4f-4a66-ad2f-57ada3e7465f
Clayton-Smith, Jill
df8946ac-9da9-4ef2-b180-f468a5424844
Edrees, Alaa Y.
e2834989-4963-4d36-953b-134aedafbe73
Feingold, Murray
7913c8ce-faad-47d4-ab7e-ff5de2e05d1b
Fryer, Alan
e47884e2-c051-421d-8784-e4b10be599fb
van Hagen, Johanna M.
09acc5c1-7953-4bd0-ab42-265a19eed138
Hennekam, Raoul C.
85ba9cf8-c151-4473-aca8-25b90b33fd3b
Jansweijer, Maaike C.E.
bea2005b-a991-4255-abc0-5577ffcb7e49
Johnson, Diana
5144874c-5607-4f68-814a-eabe50a75bd4
Kant, Sarina G.
4113b32e-63c0-442f-ac6e-fb587d3bb2ae
Opitz, John M.
e271c287-4ad0-419d-a13b-103ad6b601e4
Ramadevi, A. Radha
c4d6e982-ade3-49ae-9fe2-d7594e9e3a74
Reardon, Willie
d9a47ef5-0ccf-4b54-ad30-b6766ae0e2cd
Ross, Alison
1d5a86a3-f524-4a42-8d19-9e3443fffad7
Sarda, Pierre
d01cb41e-38af-4146-84a8-27b550584e48
Schrander-Stumpel, Constance T.R.M.
c293dae8-73e3-44b3-8040-7afdd6c96ace
Schoots, Jeroen
e74cb353-61e9-4c73-9ea4-afc46feb1893
Temple, I Karen
d63e7c66-9fb0-46c8-855d-ee2607e6c226
Terhal, Paulien A.
dafb3538-6c8b-463a-bedb-c7b0d599b62f
Toutain, Annick
d61b0d07-ec74-4859-b10a-632a08a18be2
Wise, Carol A.
c71f5ab3-e406-4102-9e81-6edcb66bdf93
Wright, Michael
1103f917-7376-48a7-9558-14df42cbd585
Skidmore, David L.
96544a7e-0850-4337-a0b9-9ce402f33773
Samuels, Mark E.
ff35f582-0183-4ea4-ab2b-e2e6f3ca106f
Hoefsloot, Lies H.
26258b50-0e03-4f0c-94e2-cdf9a6e2b907
Knoers, Nine V.A.M.
bbca3ab7-b855-4287-9055-54cf0c082741
Brunner, Han G.
05804df4-c21b-4b65-b87c-e1cefe53713e
Jackson, Andrew P.
9fed7097-f296-4d5c-ab2d-49fb80cce0a1
Bongers, Ernie M.H. F.
04e584a6-cd48-48b6-8947-9f305e7af430
de Munnik, Sonja A.
e4bbd604-c3e4-4093-8681-694e62c1bb42
Bicknell, Louise S.
9c95ab98-830f-44a8-b2fb-ac3df8bceec8
Aftimos, Salim
073edfb7-586a-4d1a-9606-f034e312706b
Al-Aama, Jumana Y.
3f22b763-6b8b-4cdf-a320-c17c7707a47e
van Bever, Yolande
66215e8b-337d-44eb-970f-b2289cef7ce2
Bober, Michael B.
e6dbfd9b-ba4f-4a66-ad2f-57ada3e7465f
Clayton-Smith, Jill
df8946ac-9da9-4ef2-b180-f468a5424844
Edrees, Alaa Y.
e2834989-4963-4d36-953b-134aedafbe73
Feingold, Murray
7913c8ce-faad-47d4-ab7e-ff5de2e05d1b
Fryer, Alan
e47884e2-c051-421d-8784-e4b10be599fb
van Hagen, Johanna M.
09acc5c1-7953-4bd0-ab42-265a19eed138
Hennekam, Raoul C.
85ba9cf8-c151-4473-aca8-25b90b33fd3b
Jansweijer, Maaike C.E.
bea2005b-a991-4255-abc0-5577ffcb7e49
Johnson, Diana
5144874c-5607-4f68-814a-eabe50a75bd4
Kant, Sarina G.
4113b32e-63c0-442f-ac6e-fb587d3bb2ae
Opitz, John M.
e271c287-4ad0-419d-a13b-103ad6b601e4
Ramadevi, A. Radha
c4d6e982-ade3-49ae-9fe2-d7594e9e3a74
Reardon, Willie
d9a47ef5-0ccf-4b54-ad30-b6766ae0e2cd
Ross, Alison
1d5a86a3-f524-4a42-8d19-9e3443fffad7
Sarda, Pierre
d01cb41e-38af-4146-84a8-27b550584e48
Schrander-Stumpel, Constance T.R.M.
c293dae8-73e3-44b3-8040-7afdd6c96ace
Schoots, Jeroen
e74cb353-61e9-4c73-9ea4-afc46feb1893
Temple, I Karen
d63e7c66-9fb0-46c8-855d-ee2607e6c226
Terhal, Paulien A.
dafb3538-6c8b-463a-bedb-c7b0d599b62f
Toutain, Annick
d61b0d07-ec74-4859-b10a-632a08a18be2
Wise, Carol A.
c71f5ab3-e406-4102-9e81-6edcb66bdf93
Wright, Michael
1103f917-7376-48a7-9558-14df42cbd585
Skidmore, David L.
96544a7e-0850-4337-a0b9-9ce402f33773
Samuels, Mark E.
ff35f582-0183-4ea4-ab2b-e2e6f3ca106f
Hoefsloot, Lies H.
26258b50-0e03-4f0c-94e2-cdf9a6e2b907
Knoers, Nine V.A.M.
bbca3ab7-b855-4287-9055-54cf0c082741
Brunner, Han G.
05804df4-c21b-4b65-b87c-e1cefe53713e
Jackson, Andrew P.
9fed7097-f296-4d5c-ab2d-49fb80cce0a1
Bongers, Ernie M.H. F.
04e584a6-cd48-48b6-8947-9f305e7af430

de Munnik, Sonja A., Bicknell, Louise S., Aftimos, Salim, Al-Aama, Jumana Y., van Bever, Yolande, Bober, Michael B., Clayton-Smith, Jill, Edrees, Alaa Y., Feingold, Murray, Fryer, Alan, van Hagen, Johanna M., Hennekam, Raoul C., Jansweijer, Maaike C.E., Johnson, Diana, Kant, Sarina G., Opitz, John M., Ramadevi, A. Radha, Reardon, Willie, Ross, Alison, Sarda, Pierre, Schrander-Stumpel, Constance T.R.M., Schoots, Jeroen, Temple, I Karen, Terhal, Paulien A., Toutain, Annick, Wise, Carol A., Wright, Michael, Skidmore, David L., Samuels, Mark E., Hoefsloot, Lies H., Knoers, Nine V.A.M., Brunner, Han G., Jackson, Andrew P. and Bongers, Ernie M.H. F. (2012) Meier–Gorlin syndrome genotype–phenotype studies: 35 individuals with pre-replication complex gene mutations and 10 without molecular diagnosis. European Journal of Human Genetics, 20 (6), 598-606. (doi:10.1038/ejhg.2011.269).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Meier–Gorlin syndrome (MGS) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by microtia, patellar aplasia/hypoplasia, and short stature. Recently, mutations in five genes from the pre-replication complex (ORC1, ORC4, ORC6, CDT1, and CDC6), crucial in cell-cycle progression and growth, were identified in individuals with MGS. Here, we report on genotype–phenotype studies in 45 individuals with MGS (27 females, 18 males; age 3 months–47 years). Thirty-five individuals had biallelic mutations in one of the five causative pre-replication genes. No homozygous or compound heterozygous null mutations were detected. In 10 individuals, no definitive molecular diagnosis was made. The triad of microtia, absent/hypoplastic patellae, and short stature was observed in 82% of individuals with MGS. Additional frequent clinical features were mammary hypoplasia (100%) and abnormal genitalia (42%; predominantly cryptorchidism and hypoplastic labia minora/majora). One individual with ORC1 mutations only had short stature, emphasizing the highly variable clinical spectrum of MGS. Individuals with ORC1 mutations had significantly shorter stature and smaller head circumferences than individuals from other gene categories. Furthermore, compared with homozygous missense mutations, compound heterozygous mutations appeared to have a more severe effect on phenotype, causing more severe growth retardation in ORC4 and more frequently pulmonary emphysema in CDT1. A lethal phenotype was seen in four individuals with compound heterozygous ORC1 and CDT1 mutations. No other clear genotype–phenotype association was observed. Growth hormone and estrogen treatment may be of some benefit, respectively, to growth retardation and breast hypoplasia, though further studies in this patient group are needed.

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Accepted/In Press date: 15 February 2012
Published date: May 2012
Organisations: Human Development & Health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 334316
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/334316
ISSN: 1018-4813
PURE UUID: df7e08e5-9dee-41fe-9910-2913ed8f1984
ORCID for I Karen Temple: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6045-1781

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 06 Mar 2012 17:10
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:00

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Sonja A. de Munnik
Author: Louise S. Bicknell
Author: Salim Aftimos
Author: Jumana Y. Al-Aama
Author: Yolande van Bever
Author: Michael B. Bober
Author: Jill Clayton-Smith
Author: Alaa Y. Edrees
Author: Murray Feingold
Author: Alan Fryer
Author: Johanna M. van Hagen
Author: Raoul C. Hennekam
Author: Maaike C.E. Jansweijer
Author: Diana Johnson
Author: Sarina G. Kant
Author: John M. Opitz
Author: A. Radha Ramadevi
Author: Willie Reardon
Author: Alison Ross
Author: Pierre Sarda
Author: Constance T.R.M. Schrander-Stumpel
Author: Jeroen Schoots
Author: I Karen Temple ORCID iD
Author: Paulien A. Terhal
Author: Annick Toutain
Author: Carol A. Wise
Author: Michael Wright
Author: David L. Skidmore
Author: Mark E. Samuels
Author: Lies H. Hoefsloot
Author: Nine V.A.M. Knoers
Author: Han G. Brunner
Author: Andrew P. Jackson
Author: Ernie M.H. F. Bongers

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×