Cargando…

A novel missense mutation in the CLCN7 gene linked to benign autosomal dominant osteopetrosis: a case series

INTRODUCTION: Osteopetrosis is a rare inherited genetic disease characterized by sclerosis of the skeleton. The absence or malfunction of osteoclasts is found to be strongly associated with the disease evolution. Currently, four clinically distinct forms of the disease have been recognized: the infa...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Rashid, Ban Mousa, Rashid, Nawshirwan Gafoor, Schulz, Ansgar, Lahr, Georgia, Nore, Beston Faiek
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3567968/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23302420
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-1947-7-7
_version_ 1782258738619482112
author Rashid, Ban Mousa
Rashid, Nawshirwan Gafoor
Schulz, Ansgar
Lahr, Georgia
Nore, Beston Faiek
author_facet Rashid, Ban Mousa
Rashid, Nawshirwan Gafoor
Schulz, Ansgar
Lahr, Georgia
Nore, Beston Faiek
author_sort Rashid, Ban Mousa
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Osteopetrosis is a rare inherited genetic disease characterized by sclerosis of the skeleton. The absence or malfunction of osteoclasts is found to be strongly associated with the disease evolution. Currently, four clinically distinct forms of the disease have been recognized: the infantile autosomal recessive osteopetrosis, the malignant and the intermediate forms, and autosomal dominant osteopetrosis, type I and type II forms. The autosomal recessive types are the most severe forms with symptoms in very early childhood, whereas the autosomal dominant classes exhibit a heterogeneous trait with milder symptoms, often at later childhood or adulthood. CASE PRESENTATION: Case 1 is the 12-year-old daughter (index patient) of an Iraqi-Kurdish family who, at the age of eight years, was diagnosed clinically to have mild autosomal dominant osteopetrosis. Presently, at 12-years old, she has severe complications due to the disease progression. In addition, the same family previously experienced the death of a female child in her late childhood. The deceased child had been misdiagnosed, at that time, with thalassemia major. In this report, we extended our investigation to identify the type of the inheritance patterns of osteopetrosis using molecular techniques, because consanguineous marriages exist within the family history. We have detected one heterozygous mutation in exon 15 of the Chloride Channel 7 gene in the index patient (Case 1), whereas other mutations were not detected in the associated genes TCIRG1, OSTM1, RANK, and RANKL. The missense mutation (CGG>TGG) located in exon 15 (c.1225C>T) of the Chloride Channel 7 gene changed the amino acid position 409 from arginine to tryptophan (p.R409W, c.1225C>T). Case 2 is the 16-year-old son (brother of the index patient) of the same family who was diagnosed clinically with mild autosomal dominant osteopetrosis. We have identified the same heterozygous mutation in exon 15 of the Chloride channel 7 gene in this patient (Case 2). The missense mutation (CGG>TGG) located in exon 15 (c.1225C>T) of the Chloride channel 7 gene changed the amino acid position 409 from arginine to tryptophan (p.R409W, c.1225C>T). In addition to the clinical diagnosis of both cases, the missense mutation we identified in one allele of the Chloride channel 7 gene could be linked to autosomal dominant osteopetrosis-II because the symptoms appear in late childhood or adolescence. CONCLUSION: In this family, the molecular diagnosis was confirmed after identification of the same mutation in the older son (sibling). Furthermore, we detected that the father and his brother (the uncle) are carriers of the same mutation, whereas the mother and her sister (the aunt) do not carry any mutation of the Chloride channel 7 gene. Thus, the disease penetrance is at least 60% in the family. The mother and father are cousins and a further consanguineous marriage between the aunt and the uncle is not recommended because the dominant allele of the Chloride channel 7 gene will be transferred to the progeny. However, a similar risk is also expected following a marriage between the uncle and an unrelated woman. The p.R409W mutation in the Chloride channel 7 gene has not yet been described in the literature and it possibly has a dominant-negative impact on the protein.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3567968
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-35679682013-02-12 A novel missense mutation in the CLCN7 gene linked to benign autosomal dominant osteopetrosis: a case series Rashid, Ban Mousa Rashid, Nawshirwan Gafoor Schulz, Ansgar Lahr, Georgia Nore, Beston Faiek J Med Case Rep Case Report INTRODUCTION: Osteopetrosis is a rare inherited genetic disease characterized by sclerosis of the skeleton. The absence or malfunction of osteoclasts is found to be strongly associated with the disease evolution. Currently, four clinically distinct forms of the disease have been recognized: the infantile autosomal recessive osteopetrosis, the malignant and the intermediate forms, and autosomal dominant osteopetrosis, type I and type II forms. The autosomal recessive types are the most severe forms with symptoms in very early childhood, whereas the autosomal dominant classes exhibit a heterogeneous trait with milder symptoms, often at later childhood or adulthood. CASE PRESENTATION: Case 1 is the 12-year-old daughter (index patient) of an Iraqi-Kurdish family who, at the age of eight years, was diagnosed clinically to have mild autosomal dominant osteopetrosis. Presently, at 12-years old, she has severe complications due to the disease progression. In addition, the same family previously experienced the death of a female child in her late childhood. The deceased child had been misdiagnosed, at that time, with thalassemia major. In this report, we extended our investigation to identify the type of the inheritance patterns of osteopetrosis using molecular techniques, because consanguineous marriages exist within the family history. We have detected one heterozygous mutation in exon 15 of the Chloride Channel 7 gene in the index patient (Case 1), whereas other mutations were not detected in the associated genes TCIRG1, OSTM1, RANK, and RANKL. The missense mutation (CGG>TGG) located in exon 15 (c.1225C>T) of the Chloride Channel 7 gene changed the amino acid position 409 from arginine to tryptophan (p.R409W, c.1225C>T). Case 2 is the 16-year-old son (brother of the index patient) of the same family who was diagnosed clinically with mild autosomal dominant osteopetrosis. We have identified the same heterozygous mutation in exon 15 of the Chloride channel 7 gene in this patient (Case 2). The missense mutation (CGG>TGG) located in exon 15 (c.1225C>T) of the Chloride channel 7 gene changed the amino acid position 409 from arginine to tryptophan (p.R409W, c.1225C>T). In addition to the clinical diagnosis of both cases, the missense mutation we identified in one allele of the Chloride channel 7 gene could be linked to autosomal dominant osteopetrosis-II because the symptoms appear in late childhood or adolescence. CONCLUSION: In this family, the molecular diagnosis was confirmed after identification of the same mutation in the older son (sibling). Furthermore, we detected that the father and his brother (the uncle) are carriers of the same mutation, whereas the mother and her sister (the aunt) do not carry any mutation of the Chloride channel 7 gene. Thus, the disease penetrance is at least 60% in the family. The mother and father are cousins and a further consanguineous marriage between the aunt and the uncle is not recommended because the dominant allele of the Chloride channel 7 gene will be transferred to the progeny. However, a similar risk is also expected following a marriage between the uncle and an unrelated woman. The p.R409W mutation in the Chloride channel 7 gene has not yet been described in the literature and it possibly has a dominant-negative impact on the protein. BioMed Central 2013-01-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3567968/ /pubmed/23302420 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-1947-7-7 Text en Copyright ©2013 Rashid et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Case Report
Rashid, Ban Mousa
Rashid, Nawshirwan Gafoor
Schulz, Ansgar
Lahr, Georgia
Nore, Beston Faiek
A novel missense mutation in the CLCN7 gene linked to benign autosomal dominant osteopetrosis: a case series
title A novel missense mutation in the CLCN7 gene linked to benign autosomal dominant osteopetrosis: a case series
title_full A novel missense mutation in the CLCN7 gene linked to benign autosomal dominant osteopetrosis: a case series
title_fullStr A novel missense mutation in the CLCN7 gene linked to benign autosomal dominant osteopetrosis: a case series
title_full_unstemmed A novel missense mutation in the CLCN7 gene linked to benign autosomal dominant osteopetrosis: a case series
title_short A novel missense mutation in the CLCN7 gene linked to benign autosomal dominant osteopetrosis: a case series
title_sort novel missense mutation in the clcn7 gene linked to benign autosomal dominant osteopetrosis: a case series
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3567968/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23302420
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1752-1947-7-7
work_keys_str_mv AT rashidbanmousa anovelmissensemutationintheclcn7genelinkedtobenignautosomaldominantosteopetrosisacaseseries
AT rashidnawshirwangafoor anovelmissensemutationintheclcn7genelinkedtobenignautosomaldominantosteopetrosisacaseseries
AT schulzansgar anovelmissensemutationintheclcn7genelinkedtobenignautosomaldominantosteopetrosisacaseseries
AT lahrgeorgia anovelmissensemutationintheclcn7genelinkedtobenignautosomaldominantosteopetrosisacaseseries
AT norebestonfaiek anovelmissensemutationintheclcn7genelinkedtobenignautosomaldominantosteopetrosisacaseseries
AT rashidbanmousa novelmissensemutationintheclcn7genelinkedtobenignautosomaldominantosteopetrosisacaseseries
AT rashidnawshirwangafoor novelmissensemutationintheclcn7genelinkedtobenignautosomaldominantosteopetrosisacaseseries
AT schulzansgar novelmissensemutationintheclcn7genelinkedtobenignautosomaldominantosteopetrosisacaseseries
AT lahrgeorgia novelmissensemutationintheclcn7genelinkedtobenignautosomaldominantosteopetrosisacaseseries
AT norebestonfaiek novelmissensemutationintheclcn7genelinkedtobenignautosomaldominantosteopetrosisacaseseries