We describe a large germline deletion removing the NF1 locus, identified by heterozygosity mapping based on microsatellite markers, in an 8-year-old French girl with a particularly severe NF1 contiguous gene syndrome. We used gene-dose mapping with sequence-tagged site real-time PCR to locate the deletion end points, which were precisely characterized by means of long-range PCR and nucleotide sequencing. The deletion is located on chromosome arm 17q and is exactly 7586986bp long. It encompasses the entire NF1 locus and about 100 other genes, including numerous chemokine genes, an attractive in silico-selected cerebrally expressed candidate gene (designated NUFIP2, for nuclear fragile X mental retardation protein interacting protein 2; NM_020772) and four microRNA genes. Interestingly, the centromeric breakpoint is located in intron 4 of the PIPOX gene (pipecolic acid oxidase; NM_016518) and the telomeric breakpoint in intron 5 of the GGNBP2 gene (gametogenetin binding protein 2; NM_024835) coding a transcription factor. As PIPOX and GGNBP2 have the same transcriptional orientation, we postulated, and then confirmed, the existence of a chimeric transcript. This transcript, and/or haploinsufficiency of one or several deleted genes, could explain the clinical severity of the syndrome in this patient.
CITATION STYLE
Pasmant, E., de Saint-Trivier, A., Laurendeau, I., Dieux-Coeslier, A., Parfait, B., Vidaud, M., … Bièche, I. (2008). Characterization of a 7.6-Mb germline deletion encompassing the NF1 locus and about a hundred genes in an NF1 contiguous gene syndrome patient. European Journal of Human Genetics, 16(12), 1459–1466. https://doi.org/10.1038/ejhg.2008.134
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.