Blepharophimosis, ptosis, and epicanthus inversus syndrome (BPES) is due to heterozygous FOXL2 intragenic mutations in about 70% of the patients, whereas total or partial gene deletions account for a minority of cases. Alteration of FOXL2 regulatory elements has been rarely described in patients with BPES. In this study, a prepubertal girl with BPES due to a 197-kb de novo deletion of the regulatory elements upstream of FOXL2 is reported. This girl presented with additional clinical features such as a soft cleft palate and microcephaly; thus, this copy number variant might have other somatic effects. The present deletion encompasses 2 coding genes (MRPS22 and COPB2), whose homozygous mutations have been associated with microcephaly. In our case, the sequences of the non-deleted allele were normal, ruling out a compound genetic defect. Normal levels of new biomarkers of ovarian reserve (anti-müllerian hormone, inhibin B) likely indicate an early diagnosis of type 2 BPES, but an evolutive gonadal damage will be excluded only by long-term follow-up. Additional reports of microdeletions upstream of FOXL2 are needed to better define the underlying genetic mechanism and the related phenotypic spectrum; the ability of the new hormonal markers to predict ovarian function in adolescence and adulthood should be confirmed.
CITATION STYLE
Bertini, V., Valetto, A., Baldinotti, F., Azzarà, A., Cambi, F., Toschi, B., … Bertelloni, S. (2019, May 1). Blepharophimosis, Ptosis, Epicanthus Inversus Syndrome: New Report with a 197-kb Deletion Upstream of FOXL2 and Review of the Literature. Molecular Syndromology. S. Karger AG. https://doi.org/10.1159/000497092
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