Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/42548
Title: Expanding genotype-phenotype associations in biglycan-related Meester-Loeys syndrome
Authors: Meester, Josephina (Jeannette)
Hebert, Anne
Bastiaansen, Maaike
Rabaut, Laura
Bastianen, Jarl
Boeckx, Nele
Benichou, Antoine
Blankensteijn, Jan D.
Brennan, Paul
Conrad, Solene
Curtis, Stephanie L.
Dent, Carolyn L.
Goel, Himanshu
Goh, Shuxiang
Houweling, Arjan
Isidor, Bertrand
Jackson, Nicola
KOOPMAN, Pieter 
Korpioja, Anita
Kuuluvainen, Liina
Low, Karen
Oakley, Stephen P.
Organ, Nicole M.
Overwater, Eline
Revencu, Nicole
Kraatari-Tiri, Minna
Trainer, Alison
Turner, Claire
Whittington, Rebecca
Zankl, Andreas
Van Laer , Lut
Verstraeten , Aline
Loeys, Bart
Issue Date: 2024
Publisher: SPRINGERNATURE
Source: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 32 (S1) , p. 14
Abstract: Loss-of-function variants in BGN, an X-linked gene coding for biglycan, are associated with Meester-Loeys syndrome (MRLS), a syndromic form of aortic aneurysm/dissection. Since the initial publication of five families in 2017, we identified eleven additional MRLS families. All sixteen probands, except two, are male and had an average age at presentation of 38 years. Thirteen males and one female presented with aortic (n = 10) and/or arterial (n = 6) aneurysms/dissections, one male (11y) presented with syndromic features without cardiovascular symptoms (yet), and one female proband (42y) was identified as part of comprehensive prenatal testing. An additional 33 BGN variant-harbouring family members (M/F:6/27) were identified with cascade screening. Their phenotype ranged from no cardiovascular or connective tissue phenotype to death due to aortic dissection. Identified BGN mutations causing a stop codon insertion, frameshift, or splicing defect and partial BGN deletions were shown to result in loss-of-function by cDNA and Western Blot analysis of skin fibroblasts of seven probands, or were strongly predicted to lead to loss-of-function based on the nature of the variant. Interestingly, a male proband with a deletion encompassing exon 2-8 of BGN presented with a more severe skeletal phenotype. RNA sequencing revealed expres-sional activation of a downstream ATPase (ATP2B3; normally repressed in skin fibroblasts) driven by the remnant BGN promotor as a possible explanation. These observations indicate that extensive analysis at RNA, cDNA and protein level is required before concluding on the pathogenicity of BGN variants; and distinct mutational mechanisms may underlie the wide phenotypic spectrum of MRLS patients. Conflict of Interest: None declared C03.5 Rare heterozygous variants in PTCH1 are associated with bladder exstrophy-epispadias complex
Document URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/42548
ISSN: 1018-4813
e-ISSN: 1476-5438
ISI #: 001147414900026
Rights: The Author(s), under exclusive licence to European Society of Human Genetics 2023
Category: M
Type: Journal Contribution
Appears in Collections:Research publications

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