Abstract

Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is a common autosomal dominant disorder. To date, a relatively small number of NF1 mutations have been characterized, thus precluding genotype-phenotype correlations. By genotyping 75 NF1 families, we have detected six hemizygous patients (two of whom are members of the same family). The five presumed deletions were confirmed by two quantitative methods of analysis of NF1 copy number: Southern hybridization with cDNA probes and a single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis that discriminates between the NF1 gene and the pseudogene sequences. The five deletions remove most of the NF1 gene, at least 225 kb, from exon 9 to the 3' end of the coding sequence. The origin of de novo mutations in the NF1 gene has been reported to be mainly paternal but we have determined that four of the de novo deletions involved the maternal chromosome and one the paternal chromosome. The six patients with deletions exhibited precocious, multiple clinical features of the disease. The incidence of tumor complications, particularly plexiform neurofibromas and intracranial tumors, among this group of patients is higher than the observed incidence in our NF1 population, suggesting that NF1 haploinsufficiency may cause a more severe phenotype with regard to tumor development. In contrast to other reports that associated large deletions with mildly dysmorphic facies, mental retardation and a large number of cutaneous neurofibromas, only one out of our six patients presented this phenotype.

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