Supplementary Material for: Clinical and Molecular Heterogeneity in Brazilian Patients with Sotos Syndrome
Description
Sotos syndrome (SoS) is a multiple anomaly, congenital disorder characterized by overgrowth, macrocephaly, distinctive facial features and variable degree of intellectual disability. Haploinsufficiency of the NSD1 gene at 5q35.3, arising from 5q35 microdeletions, point mutations, and partial gene deletions, accounts for a majority of patients with SoS. Recently, mutations and possible pathogenetic rare CNVs, both affecting a few candidate genes for overgrowth, have been reported in patients with Sotos-like overgrowth features. To estimate the frequency of NSD1 defects in the Brazilian SoS population and possibly reveal other genes implicated in the etiopathogenesis of this syndrome, we collected a cohort of 21 Brazilian patients, who fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for SoS, and analyzed the NSD1 and PTEN genes by means of multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification and mutational screening analyses. We identified a classical NSD1 microdeletion, a novel missense mutation (p.C1593W), and 2 previously reported truncating mutations: p.R1984X and p.V1760Gfs*2. In addition, we identified a novel de novo PTEN gene mutation (p.D312Rfs*2) in a patient with a less severe presentation of SoS phenotype, which did not include pre- and postnatal overgrowth. For the first time, our study implies PTEN in the pathogenesis of SoS and further emphasizes the existence of ethno-geographical differences in NSD1 molecular alterations between patients with SoS from Europe/North America (70-93%) and those from South America (10-19%).
Publication Date
1-1-2017
Publisher
figshare Academic Research System
DOI
10.6084/m9.figshare.5127454
Document Type
Data Set
Recommended Citation
Soares De Paiva, Isaias; Frigério Domingues, Carlos E.; Cook, Melissa M.; Moretti-Ferreira, Danilo; Vieira, Gustavo H.; Ferreira De Lima, Renata L.; Srivastava, Anand K.; De Carvalho, Daniel R. (2017), "Supplementary Material for: Clinical and Molecular Heterogeneity in Brazilian Patients with Sotos Syndrome", figshare Academic Research System, doi: 10.6084/m9.figshare.5127454
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.5127454
Identifier
10.6084/m9.figshare.5127454
Embargo Date
1-1-2017