Data availabilitySummary statistics generated by COVID-19 Host Genetics Initiative are available online (https://www.covid19hg.org/results/r6/). The analyses described here use the freeze 6 data. The COVID-19 Host Genetics Initiative continues to regularly release new data freezes. Summary statistics for samples from individuals of non-European ancestry are not currently available owing to the small individual sample sizes of these groups, but the results for 23 loci lead variants are reported in Supplementary Table 3. Individual-level data can be requested directly from the authors of the contributing studies, listed in Supplementary Table 1.
Multiple osteochondromas (MO), also known as hereditary multiple exostoses (HME), is one of the most common hereditary musculoskeletal diseases in Caucasians (1/50,000) with wide clinical variability and genetic heterogeneity. Two genes have thus far been identified as causing the disease, namely EXT1 and EXT2. Various methods to detect mutations in the EXT genes have been used. Here a cohort of 100 MO patients belonging to unrelated Italian families have been analyzed by single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis or by denaturing high performance liquid chromatography (DHPLC). However, neither of these techniques can detect deletions or duplications of entire exons. Families that were negative at SSCP/DHPLC analysis underwent two-color multiple ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) analysis. By these complementary techniques mutation detection was significantly improved and 26 novel mutations have been revealed as well as 18 previously described mutations to give a total of 44 different mutations. Thus we can conclude that combining MLPA with DHPLC in point-mutations negative MO families, the detection of mutations in EXT genes can significantly improve the identification of both point-mutations and mid-size rearrangements. More important, we were able to characterize all those patients who were negative at the first PCR-based method screening.
We report on a newborn with severe psychomotor retardation, minor anomalies, congenital heart defects, thumb and urogenital abnormalities. Cytogenetic analysis showed a 4q24qter duplication, never described before, as the result of a de novo t(4;14). The extension of the duplicated 4q region was defined by FISH using YAC probes. The breakpoint was localized between 106.3cM (YAC 800f2, D4S1572) and 111 cM (YAC 744e4, D4S1564). Comparing our patient with those previously reported in literature, we observed some features mature frequently reported in these patients: psychomotor retardation, retromicrognathia, low set and/or malformed ears and some more specific traits: congenital cardiac defects, hypoplastic thumb and urogenital abnormalities.
BackgroundDuplications of MECP2 gene in males cause a syndrome characterized by distinctive clinical features, including severe to profound mental retardation, infantile hypotonia, mild dysmorphic features, poor speech development, autistic features, seizures, progressive spasticity and recurrent infections. Patients with complex chromosome rearrangements, leading to Xq28 duplication, share most of the clinical features of individuals with tandem duplications, in particular neurologic problems, suggesting a major pathogenetic role of MECP2 overexpression.ResultsWe performed cytogenetic and molecular cytogenetic studies in a previously described family with affected males showing congenital ataxia, late-onset progressive myoclonic encephalopathy and selective macular degeneration. Microsatellite, FISH and array-CGH analyses identified a recombinant X chromosome with a deletion of the PAR1 region, encompassing SHOX, replaced by a duplicated segment of the Xq28 terminal portion, including MECP2.ConclusionsOur report describes the identification of the actual genetic cause underlying a severe syndrome that previous preliminary analyses erroneously associated to a terminal Xp22.33 region. In the present family as well as in previously reported patients with similar rearrangements, the observed neurologic phenotype is ascribable to MECP2 duplication, with an undefined contribution of the other involved genes. Maculopathy, presented by affected males reported here, could be a novel clinical feature associated to Xq28 disomy due to recombinant X chromosomes, but at present the underlying pathogenetic mechanism is unknown and this potential clinical correlation should be confirmed through the collection of additional patients.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.