Duplication of the EFNB1 gene in familial hypertelorism: Imbalance in ephrin-B1 expression and abnormal phenotypes in humans and mice

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Abstract

Familial hypertelorism, characterized by widely spaced eyes, classically shows autosomal dominant inheritance (Teebi type), but some pedigrees are compatible with X-linkage. No mechanism has been described previously, but clinical similarity has been noted to craniofrontonasal syndrome (CFNS), which is caused by mutations in the X-linked EFNB1 gene. Here we report a family in which females in three generations presented with hypertelorism, but lacked either craniosynostosis or a grooved nasal tip, excluding CFNS. DNA sequencing of EFNB1 was normal, but further analysis revealed a duplication of 937kb including EFNB1 and two flanking genes: PJA1 and STARD8. We found that the X chromosome bearing the duplication produces ∼1.6-fold more EFNB1 transcript than the normal X chromosome and propose that, in the context of X-inactivation, this difference in expression level of EFNB1 results in abnormal cell sorting leading to hypertelorism. To support this hypothesis, we provide evidence from a mouse model carrying a targeted human EFNB1 cDNA, that abnormal cell sorting occurs in the cranial region. Hence, we propose that X-linked cases resembling Teebi hypertelorism may have a similar mechanism to CFNS, and that cellular mosaicism for different levels of ephrin-B1 (as well as simple presence/absence) leads to craniofacial abnormalities. © 2011 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Babbs, C., Stewart, H. S., Williams, L. J., Connell, L., Goriely, A., Twigg, S. R. F., … Wilkie, A. O. M. (2011). Duplication of the EFNB1 gene in familial hypertelorism: Imbalance in ephrin-B1 expression and abnormal phenotypes in humans and mice. Human Mutation, 32(8), 930–938. https://doi.org/10.1002/humu.21521

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