Abstract

BackgroundAnophthalmia and microphthalmia are etiologically and clinically heterogeneous. Lenz microphthalmia is a syndromic form that is typically inherited in an X-linked pattern, though the causative gene mutation is unknown. Townes-Brocks syndrome manifests thumb anomalies, imperforate anus, and ear anomalies. We present a 13-year-old boy with a syndromic microphthalmia phenotype and a clinical diagnosis of Lenz microphthalmia syndrome.Case PresentationThe patient was subjected to clinical and molecular evaluation, including array CGH analysis. The clinical features included left clinical anophthalmia, right microphthalmia, anteriorly placed anus with fistula, chordee, ventriculoseptal defect, patent ductus arteriosus, posteriorly rotated ears, hypotonia, growth retardation with delayed bone age, and mental retardation. The patient was found to have an approximately 5.6 Mb deletion of 16q11.2q12.1 by microarray based-comparative genomic hybridization, which includes the SALL1 gene, which causes Townes-Brocks syndrome.ConclusionsDeletions of 16q11.2q12.2 have been reported in several individuals, although those prior reports did not note microphthalmia or anophthalmia. This region includes SALL1, which causes Townes-Brocks syndrome. In retrospect, this child has a number of features that can be explained by the SALL1 deletion, although it is not clear if the microphthalmia is a rare feature of Townes-Brocks syndrome or caused by other mechanisms. These data suggest that rare copy number changes may be a cause of syndromic microphthalmia allowing a personalized genomic medicine approach to the care of patients with these aberrations.

Highlights

  • Anophthalmia and microphthalmia are etiologically and clinically heterogeneous

  • Deletions of 16q11.2q12.2 have been reported in several individuals, those prior reports did not note microphthalmia or anophthalmia. This region includes SALL1, which causes Townes-Brocks syndrome. This child has a number of features that can be explained by the SALL1 deletion, it is not clear if the microphthalmia is a rare feature of Townes-Brocks syndrome or caused by other mechanisms

  • These data suggest that rare copy number changes may be a cause of syndromic microphthalmia allowing a personalized genomic medicine approach to the care of patients with these aberrations

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Summary

Conclusions

We report a boy with microdeletion of 16q11.2q12.1 identified by array CGH. Microdeletion of 16q11.2q12.2 has been reported as an emerging microdeletion syndrome [17]. The deleted region in the patient reported here includes 26 genes, including three recognized disease-causing genes (Table 1). This list includes the SALL1 gene, which when mutated causes Townes-Brocks syndrome [18]. The classic phenotype for TBS includes imperforate anus, dysplastic ears with hearing impairment, and thumb malformations, many affected patients do not have the typical phenotypic features. Less frequent manifestations of TBS include renal, heart, foot, and genitourinary anomalies, and mental retardation. This patient has a number of phenotypic manifestations that are not typical of TBS including A/M, cognitive impairment, borderline small head size, growth retardation, abnormal body habitus, and relatively normal thumbs. SHC SH2-domain binding protein 1 vacuolar sorting protein 35 origin recognition complex subunit 6 myosin light chain kinase 3 alanine aminotransferase 2 DnaJ subfamily A member 2 neuropilin- and tolloid-like protein 2 integrin alpha FG-GAP repeat containing 1 phosphorylase kinase, beta isoform a ATP-binding cassette protein C12 ATP-binding cassette protein C11 peroxisomal LON protease-like seven in absentia homolog 1 isoform a Nedd binding protein 1 cerebellin 1 precursor zinc finger protein 423 transmembrane protein 188 HEAT repeat containing 3 PAP associated domain containing 5 adenylate cyclase 7 Bromodomain containing 7 naked cuticle homolog 1 sorting nexin-20 nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase CYLD sal-like 1

Background
Chromosomal Methodology Region
13. Jones KL
Findings
28. Blau EB
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