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Agnathia-otocephaly complex and asymmetric velopharyngeal insufficiency due to an in-frame duplication in OTX2.

Sergouniotis, Panagiotis I; Urquhart, Jill E; Williams, Simon G; Bhaskar, Sanjeev S; Black, Graeme C; Lovell, Simon C; Whitby, David J; Newman, William G; Clayton-Smith, Jill

Journal of human genetics. 2015;60(4):199-202.

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Abstract

Agnathia-otocephaly complex is a malformation characterized by absent/hypoplastic mandible and abnormally positioned ears. Mutations in two genes, PRRX1 and OTX2, have been described in a small number of families with this disorder. We performed clinical and genetic testing in an additional family. The proband is a healthy female with a complicated pregnancy history that includes two offspring diagnosed with agnathia-otocephaly during prenatal ultrasound scans. Exome sequencing was performed in fetal DNA from one of these two offspring revealing a heterozygous duplication in OTX2: c.271_273dupCAG, p.(Gln91dup). This change leads to the insertion of a glutamine within the OTX2 homeodomain region, and is predicted to alter this signaling molecule's ability to interact with DNA. The same variant was also identified in the proband's clinically unaffected 38-year-old husband and their 9-year-old daughter, who presented with a small mandible, normal ears and velopharyngeal insufficiency due to a short hemi-palate. This unusual presentation of OTX2-related disease suggests that OTX2 might have a role in palatal hypoplasia cases. A previously unreported OTX2 variant associated with extreme intrafamilial variability is described and the utility of exome sequencing as a tool to confirm the diagnosis of agnathia-otocephaly and to inform the reproductive decisions of affected families is highlighted.

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Place of publication:
England
Volume:
60
Issue:
4
Pagination:
199-202
Digital Object Identifier:
10.1038/jhg.2014.122
Pubmed Identifier:
25589041
Pii Identifier:
jhg2014122
Access state:
Active

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Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:293422
Created by:
Black, Graeme
Created:
21st December, 2015, 10:09:49
Last modified by:
Black, Graeme
Last modified:
21st December, 2015, 10:09:49

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