Cargando…

BHD mutations, clinical and molecular genetic investigations of Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome: a new series of 50 families and a review of published reports

BACKGROUND: Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome (BHDS) (MIM 135150) is an autosomal dominant predisposition to the development of follicular hamartomas (fibrofolliculomas), lung cysts, spontaneous pneumothorax, and kidney neoplasms. Germline mutations in BHD are associated with the susceptibility for BHDS. We p...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Toro, J R, Wei, M-H, Glenn, G M, Weinreich, M, Toure, O, Vocke, C, Turner, M, Choyke, P, Merino, M J, Pinto, P A, Steinberg, S M, Schmidt, L S, Linehan, W M
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2564862/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18234728
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jmg.2007.054304
_version_ 1782159805354344448
author Toro, J R
Wei, M-H
Glenn, G M
Weinreich, M
Toure, O
Vocke, C
Turner, M
Choyke, P
Merino, M J
Pinto, P A
Steinberg, S M
Schmidt, L S
Linehan, W M
author_facet Toro, J R
Wei, M-H
Glenn, G M
Weinreich, M
Toure, O
Vocke, C
Turner, M
Choyke, P
Merino, M J
Pinto, P A
Steinberg, S M
Schmidt, L S
Linehan, W M
author_sort Toro, J R
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome (BHDS) (MIM 135150) is an autosomal dominant predisposition to the development of follicular hamartomas (fibrofolliculomas), lung cysts, spontaneous pneumothorax, and kidney neoplasms. Germline mutations in BHD are associated with the susceptibility for BHDS. We previously described 51 BHDS families with BHD germline mutations. OBJECTIVE: To characterise the BHD mutation spectrum, novel mutations and new clinical features of one previously reported and 50 new families with BHDS. METHODS: Direct bidirectional DNA sequencing was used to screen for mutations in the BHD gene, and insertion and deletion mutations were confirmed by subcloning. We analysed evolutionary conservation of folliculin by comparing human against the orthologous sequences. RESULTS: The BHD mutation detection rate was 88% (51/58). Of the 23 different germline mutations identified, 13 were novel consisting of: four splice site, three deletions, two insertions, two nonsense, one deletion/insertion, and one missense mutation. We report the first germline missense mutation in BHD c.1978A>G (K508R) in a patient who presented with bilateral multifocal renal oncocytomas. This mutation occurs in a highly conserved amino acid in folliculin. 10% (5/51) of the families had individuals without histologically confirmed fibrofolliculomas. Of 44 families ascertained on the basis of skin lesions, 18 (41%) had kidney tumours. Patients with a germline BHD mutation and family history of kidney cancer had a statistically significantly increased probability of developing renal tumours compared to patients without a positive family history (p = 0.0032). Similarly, patients with a BHD germline mutation and family history of spontaneous pneumothorax had a significantly increased greater probability of having spontaneous pneumothorax than BHDS patients without a family history of spontaneous pneumothorax (p = 0.011). A comprehensive review of published reports of cases with BHD germline mutation is discussed. CONCLUSION: BHDS is characterised by a spectrum of mutations, and clinical heterogeneity both among and within families.
format Text
id pubmed-2564862
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-25648622008-10-24 BHD mutations, clinical and molecular genetic investigations of Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome: a new series of 50 families and a review of published reports Toro, J R Wei, M-H Glenn, G M Weinreich, M Toure, O Vocke, C Turner, M Choyke, P Merino, M J Pinto, P A Steinberg, S M Schmidt, L S Linehan, W M J Med Genet Original Articles BACKGROUND: Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome (BHDS) (MIM 135150) is an autosomal dominant predisposition to the development of follicular hamartomas (fibrofolliculomas), lung cysts, spontaneous pneumothorax, and kidney neoplasms. Germline mutations in BHD are associated with the susceptibility for BHDS. We previously described 51 BHDS families with BHD germline mutations. OBJECTIVE: To characterise the BHD mutation spectrum, novel mutations and new clinical features of one previously reported and 50 new families with BHDS. METHODS: Direct bidirectional DNA sequencing was used to screen for mutations in the BHD gene, and insertion and deletion mutations were confirmed by subcloning. We analysed evolutionary conservation of folliculin by comparing human against the orthologous sequences. RESULTS: The BHD mutation detection rate was 88% (51/58). Of the 23 different germline mutations identified, 13 were novel consisting of: four splice site, three deletions, two insertions, two nonsense, one deletion/insertion, and one missense mutation. We report the first germline missense mutation in BHD c.1978A>G (K508R) in a patient who presented with bilateral multifocal renal oncocytomas. This mutation occurs in a highly conserved amino acid in folliculin. 10% (5/51) of the families had individuals without histologically confirmed fibrofolliculomas. Of 44 families ascertained on the basis of skin lesions, 18 (41%) had kidney tumours. Patients with a germline BHD mutation and family history of kidney cancer had a statistically significantly increased probability of developing renal tumours compared to patients without a positive family history (p = 0.0032). Similarly, patients with a BHD germline mutation and family history of spontaneous pneumothorax had a significantly increased greater probability of having spontaneous pneumothorax than BHDS patients without a family history of spontaneous pneumothorax (p = 0.011). A comprehensive review of published reports of cases with BHD germline mutation is discussed. CONCLUSION: BHDS is characterised by a spectrum of mutations, and clinical heterogeneity both among and within families. BMJ Publishing Group 2008-06 2008-01-30 /pmc/articles/PMC2564862/ /pubmed/18234728 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jmg.2007.054304 Text en © Toro et al 2008 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Toro, J R
Wei, M-H
Glenn, G M
Weinreich, M
Toure, O
Vocke, C
Turner, M
Choyke, P
Merino, M J
Pinto, P A
Steinberg, S M
Schmidt, L S
Linehan, W M
BHD mutations, clinical and molecular genetic investigations of Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome: a new series of 50 families and a review of published reports
title BHD mutations, clinical and molecular genetic investigations of Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome: a new series of 50 families and a review of published reports
title_full BHD mutations, clinical and molecular genetic investigations of Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome: a new series of 50 families and a review of published reports
title_fullStr BHD mutations, clinical and molecular genetic investigations of Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome: a new series of 50 families and a review of published reports
title_full_unstemmed BHD mutations, clinical and molecular genetic investigations of Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome: a new series of 50 families and a review of published reports
title_short BHD mutations, clinical and molecular genetic investigations of Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome: a new series of 50 families and a review of published reports
title_sort bhd mutations, clinical and molecular genetic investigations of birt–hogg–dubé syndrome: a new series of 50 families and a review of published reports
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2564862/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18234728
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jmg.2007.054304
work_keys_str_mv AT torojr bhdmutationsclinicalandmoleculargeneticinvestigationsofbirthoggdubesyndromeanewseriesof50familiesandareviewofpublishedreports
AT weimh bhdmutationsclinicalandmoleculargeneticinvestigationsofbirthoggdubesyndromeanewseriesof50familiesandareviewofpublishedreports
AT glenngm bhdmutationsclinicalandmoleculargeneticinvestigationsofbirthoggdubesyndromeanewseriesof50familiesandareviewofpublishedreports
AT weinreichm bhdmutationsclinicalandmoleculargeneticinvestigationsofbirthoggdubesyndromeanewseriesof50familiesandareviewofpublishedreports
AT toureo bhdmutationsclinicalandmoleculargeneticinvestigationsofbirthoggdubesyndromeanewseriesof50familiesandareviewofpublishedreports
AT vockec bhdmutationsclinicalandmoleculargeneticinvestigationsofbirthoggdubesyndromeanewseriesof50familiesandareviewofpublishedreports
AT turnerm bhdmutationsclinicalandmoleculargeneticinvestigationsofbirthoggdubesyndromeanewseriesof50familiesandareviewofpublishedreports
AT choykep bhdmutationsclinicalandmoleculargeneticinvestigationsofbirthoggdubesyndromeanewseriesof50familiesandareviewofpublishedreports
AT merinomj bhdmutationsclinicalandmoleculargeneticinvestigationsofbirthoggdubesyndromeanewseriesof50familiesandareviewofpublishedreports
AT pintopa bhdmutationsclinicalandmoleculargeneticinvestigationsofbirthoggdubesyndromeanewseriesof50familiesandareviewofpublishedreports
AT steinbergsm bhdmutationsclinicalandmoleculargeneticinvestigationsofbirthoggdubesyndromeanewseriesof50familiesandareviewofpublishedreports
AT schmidtls bhdmutationsclinicalandmoleculargeneticinvestigationsofbirthoggdubesyndromeanewseriesof50familiesandareviewofpublishedreports
AT linehanwm bhdmutationsclinicalandmoleculargeneticinvestigationsofbirthoggdubesyndromeanewseriesof50familiesandareviewofpublishedreports