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Confirmation of a Phenotypic Entity for TSPEAR Variants in Egyptian Ectodermal Dysplasia Patients and Role of Ethnicity

Ectodermal dysplasia (ED) are hereditary disorders characterized by the disturbance of the ectodermal development of at least two of four ectodermal tissues: teeth, hair, nails and sweat glands. Clinical classification of ED is challenged by overlapping features, variable expressivity, and low numbe...

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Autores principales: Rabie, Eman A., Sayed, Inas S. M., Amr, Khalda, Ahmed, Hoda A., Mostafa, Mostafa I., Hassib, Nehal F., El-Sayed, Heba, Zada, Suher K., El-Kamah, Ghada
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9222913/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35741818
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes13061056
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author Rabie, Eman A.
Sayed, Inas S. M.
Amr, Khalda
Ahmed, Hoda A.
Mostafa, Mostafa I.
Hassib, Nehal F.
El-Sayed, Heba
Zada, Suher K.
El-Kamah, Ghada
author_facet Rabie, Eman A.
Sayed, Inas S. M.
Amr, Khalda
Ahmed, Hoda A.
Mostafa, Mostafa I.
Hassib, Nehal F.
El-Sayed, Heba
Zada, Suher K.
El-Kamah, Ghada
author_sort Rabie, Eman A.
collection PubMed
description Ectodermal dysplasia (ED) are hereditary disorders characterized by the disturbance of the ectodermal development of at least two of four ectodermal tissues: teeth, hair, nails and sweat glands. Clinical classification of ED is challenged by overlapping features, variable expressivity, and low number of patients, hindering full phenotypic spectrum identification. Disease-causing variants in elements of major developmental pathways, e.g., Ectodysplasin/NFκB, Wnt, and Tp63 pathways, have been identified in fewer than half of ED phenotypes. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) was performed for ten Egyptian ED patients presenting with tooth agenesis, normal sweating, scalp hypotrichosis, and sharing characteristic facial features. WES was followed by in silico analysis of the effects of novel detected genetic variants on mRNA and protein structure. The study identified four novel rare pathogenic and likely pathogenic TSPEAR variants, a gene which was recently found to be involved in ectodermal organogenesis. A novel in-frame deletion recurred in eight patients from six unrelated families. Comparing our cohort to previously reported TSPEAR cohorts highlighted the influence of ethnicity on TSPEAR phenotypic affection. Our study expands the clinical and mutational spectrum of the growing TSPEAR associated phenotypes, and pinpoints the influence of WES and in silico tools on identification of rare disease-causing variants.
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spelling pubmed-92229132022-06-24 Confirmation of a Phenotypic Entity for TSPEAR Variants in Egyptian Ectodermal Dysplasia Patients and Role of Ethnicity Rabie, Eman A. Sayed, Inas S. M. Amr, Khalda Ahmed, Hoda A. Mostafa, Mostafa I. Hassib, Nehal F. El-Sayed, Heba Zada, Suher K. El-Kamah, Ghada Genes (Basel) Article Ectodermal dysplasia (ED) are hereditary disorders characterized by the disturbance of the ectodermal development of at least two of four ectodermal tissues: teeth, hair, nails and sweat glands. Clinical classification of ED is challenged by overlapping features, variable expressivity, and low number of patients, hindering full phenotypic spectrum identification. Disease-causing variants in elements of major developmental pathways, e.g., Ectodysplasin/NFκB, Wnt, and Tp63 pathways, have been identified in fewer than half of ED phenotypes. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) was performed for ten Egyptian ED patients presenting with tooth agenesis, normal sweating, scalp hypotrichosis, and sharing characteristic facial features. WES was followed by in silico analysis of the effects of novel detected genetic variants on mRNA and protein structure. The study identified four novel rare pathogenic and likely pathogenic TSPEAR variants, a gene which was recently found to be involved in ectodermal organogenesis. A novel in-frame deletion recurred in eight patients from six unrelated families. Comparing our cohort to previously reported TSPEAR cohorts highlighted the influence of ethnicity on TSPEAR phenotypic affection. Our study expands the clinical and mutational spectrum of the growing TSPEAR associated phenotypes, and pinpoints the influence of WES and in silico tools on identification of rare disease-causing variants. MDPI 2022-06-13 /pmc/articles/PMC9222913/ /pubmed/35741818 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes13061056 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Rabie, Eman A.
Sayed, Inas S. M.
Amr, Khalda
Ahmed, Hoda A.
Mostafa, Mostafa I.
Hassib, Nehal F.
El-Sayed, Heba
Zada, Suher K.
El-Kamah, Ghada
Confirmation of a Phenotypic Entity for TSPEAR Variants in Egyptian Ectodermal Dysplasia Patients and Role of Ethnicity
title Confirmation of a Phenotypic Entity for TSPEAR Variants in Egyptian Ectodermal Dysplasia Patients and Role of Ethnicity
title_full Confirmation of a Phenotypic Entity for TSPEAR Variants in Egyptian Ectodermal Dysplasia Patients and Role of Ethnicity
title_fullStr Confirmation of a Phenotypic Entity for TSPEAR Variants in Egyptian Ectodermal Dysplasia Patients and Role of Ethnicity
title_full_unstemmed Confirmation of a Phenotypic Entity for TSPEAR Variants in Egyptian Ectodermal Dysplasia Patients and Role of Ethnicity
title_short Confirmation of a Phenotypic Entity for TSPEAR Variants in Egyptian Ectodermal Dysplasia Patients and Role of Ethnicity
title_sort confirmation of a phenotypic entity for tspear variants in egyptian ectodermal dysplasia patients and role of ethnicity
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9222913/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35741818
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes13061056
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