1. Academic Validation
  2. Homozygous deletion of an EGR2 enhancer in congenital amyelinating neuropathy

Homozygous deletion of an EGR2 enhancer in congenital amyelinating neuropathy

  • Ann Neurol. 2012 May;71(5):719-23. doi: 10.1002/ana.23527.
Benoît Funalot 1 Piotr Topilko Maria Antonia Ramos Arroyo Abdelaziz Sefiani E Tessa Hedley-Whyte Maria E Yoldi Laurence Richard Estelle Touraille Mathieu Laurichesse Emmanuel Khalifa Jasmine Chauzeix Adama Ouedraogo Didier Cros Corinne Magdelaine Franck G Sturtz J Andoni Urtizberea Patrick Charnay Federico Garcia Bragado Jean-Michel Vallat
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 National Referral Center for Rare Peripheral Neuropathies, University Hospital, Limoges, France. [email protected]
Abstract

The transcription factor EGR2 is expressed in Schwann cells, where it controls peripheral nerve myelination. Mutations of EGR2 have been found in patients with congenital hypomyelinating neuropathy or Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1D. In a patient with congenital amyelinating neuropathy, we observed pathological abnormalities recapitulating the peripheral nervous system phenotype of homozygous Egr2-null mice. This patient, born from consanguineous parents, showed no EGR2 immunoreactivity in Schwann cells and harbored a homozygous 10.7-kilobase-long deletion encompassing a myelin-specific enhancer of EGR2. This regulatory mutation is the first genetic abnormality associated with congenital amyelinating neuropathy in humans.

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