1. Academic Validation
  2. A deleterious founder mutation in the BMPER gene causes diaphanospondylodysostosis (DSD)

A deleterious founder mutation in the BMPER gene causes diaphanospondylodysostosis (DSD)

  • Am J Med Genet A. 2011 Nov;155A(11):2801-6. doi: 10.1002/ajmg.a.34240.
Ziva Ben-Neriah 1 Rachel Michaelson-Cohen Michal Inbar-Feigenberg Michael Nadjari Sharon Zeligson Avraham Shaag Shamir Zenvirt Orly Elpeleg Ephrat Levy-Lahad
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Monique and Jacques Roboh Department of Genetic Research, Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel.
Abstract

Diaphonospondylodysostosis (DSD) is a rare, recessively inherited, lethal skeletal dysplasia, characterized by severe spinal ossification, segmentation defects, and renal cystic dysplasia with nephrogenic rests. We hereby present three affected individuals: two children and a fetus from two unrelated East Jerusalem Arab-Muslim families. Whereas most fetuses die in utero or perinatally, one of the children survived to 15 months. Homozygosity mapping in the two families demonstrated a single common 3.87 Mb region on chromosome 7, ruling out previously known spondylocostal/spondylothoracic dysostosis loci. The 15 protein coding genes in the region were prioritized, and some were sequenced. A single, novel deleterious mutation, Q104X, was detected in the bone morphogenetic protein-binding endothelial regulator protein (BMPER) gene, recently reported to be mutated in other DSD patients [Funari et al., 2010]. The novel mutation we identified is an ancestral founder allele, as evidenced by a shared 440 SNP haplotype, and its frequency in the general Arab population is estimated to be <1:123. Our findings confirm loss of BMPER function as a cause of axial versus appendicular skeletal defects, and suggest that less deleterious mutations may be involved in milder axial skeleton abnormalities.

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