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Homozygous and compound-heterozygous mutations in TGDS cause Catel-Manzke syndrome

Authors

  • N. Ehmke
  • A. Caliebe
  • R. Koenig
  • S.G. Kant
  • Z. Stark
  • V. Cormier-Daire
  • D. Wieczorek
  • G. Gillessen-Kaesbach
  • K. Hoff
  • A. Kawalia
  • H. Thiele
  • J. Altmüller
  • B. Fischer-Zirnsak
  • A. Knaus
  • N. Zhu
  • V. Heinrich
  • C. Huber
  • I. Harabula
  • M. Spielmann
  • D. Horn
  • U. Kornak
  • J. Hecht
  • P.M. Krawitz
  • P. Nürnberg
  • R. Siebert
  • H. Manzke
  • S. Mundlos

Journal

  • American Journal of Human Genetics

Citation

  • Am J Hum Genet 95 (6): 763-70

Abstract

  • Catel-Manzke syndrome is characterized by Pierre Robin sequence and a unique form of bilateral hyperphalangy causing a clinodactyly of the index finger. We describe the identification of homozygous and compound heterozygous mutations in TGDS in seven unrelated individuals with typical Catel-Manzke syndrome by exome sequencing. Six different TGDS mutations were detected: c.892A>G (p.Asn298Asp), c.270_271del (p.Lys91Asnfs(∗)22), c.298G>T (p.Ala100Ser), c.294T>G (p.Phe98Leu), c.269A>G (p.Glu90Gly), and c.700T>C (p.Tyr234His), all predicted to be disease causing. By using haplotype reconstruction we showed that the mutation c.298G>T is probably a founder mutation. Due to the spectrum of the amino acid changes, we suggest that loss of function in TGDS is the underlying mechanism of Catel-Manzke syndrome. TGDS (dTDP-D-glucose 4,6-dehydrogenase) is a conserved protein belonging to the SDR family and probably plays a role in nucleotide sugar metabolism.


DOI

doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.11.004