Abstract

Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome (BHDS), which is also called Hornstein-Knickenberg syndrome (HKS), is a hereditary autosomal dominant disorder caused by germline mutations in the folliculin gene (FLCN, NM_144997). More pulmonary manifestations (pulmonary cysts and recurrent pneumothoraxes) but fewer skin fibrofolliculomas and renal malignancy are found in Asian BHDS patients compared with other BHDS patients. The atypical manifestation can easily lead to a missed or delayed diagnosis. Here, we report a Chinese family with BHDS that presented with primary spontaneous pneumothorax (PSP) and extensive pulmonary cysts in the absence of skin lesions or renal neoplasms. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) was used to sequence the FLCN gene, and Sanger sequencing was carried out on the samples to confirm the presence of these variants. Among the 13 family members, a novel frameshift variant of FLCN (c.912delT/p.E305KfsX18) was identified in seven individuals. This variant has not been reported before. Bioinformatics analysis showed that the novel variant might lead to a premature stop codon after 18 amino acid residues in exon 9, and this may affect the expression level of FLCN. The identification of this novel frameshift variant of FLCN not only further confirms the familial inheritance of BHDS in the proband but also expands the mutational spectrum of the FLCN gene in patients with BHDS.

Highlights

  • Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome (BHDS, OMIM#135150), which is called Hornstein-Knickenberg syndrome (HKS), is a rare autosomal dominant inherited disorder that predisposes individuals to develop benign skin tumors, renal neoplasms, and pulmonary cysts with a risk of spontaneous pneumothorax (Menko et al, 2009)

  • Sequence analysis of the FLCN gene revealed a novel deletion variant (c.912delT/p.E305KfsX18) in exon 9. This variant was confirmed by Sanger sequencing (Figure 1)

  • The c.912delT variant resulted in a frameshift at amino acid position 305 and the introduction of a premature stop codon after 18 amino acid residues (p.E305KfsX18) and was predicted to be disease-causing by MutationTaster

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Summary

Introduction

Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome (BHDS, OMIM#135150), which is called Hornstein-Knickenberg syndrome (HKS), is a rare autosomal dominant inherited disorder that predisposes individuals to develop benign skin tumors (fibrofolliculomas), renal neoplasms, and pulmonary cysts with a risk of spontaneous pneumothorax (Menko et al, 2009). This disease was first described by Otto P. James Dube (Birt and Hogg, 1977) from Canada described similar hereditary skin lesions, fibrofolliculoma, without any extracutaneous cancer proneness

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