An infant with premature closure of cranial sutures due to variant of ERF gene and a literature review.
10.3760/cma.j.cn511374-20220815-00548
- Author:
Jin WANG
1
;
Dan WANG
;
Lingkong ZENG
;
Shi WANG
Author Information
1. Department of Neonatology, Wuhan Children's Hospital (Wuhan Maternal and Child Health Care Hospital), Tongji Medical College, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, Hubei 430015, China. wangshi@zgwhfe.com.
- Publication Type:Review
- MeSH:
Female;
Humans;
Cranial Sutures/surgery*;
Craniosynostoses/genetics*;
Genetic Testing;
Mutation;
Repressor Proteins/genetics*;
Infant
- From:
Chinese Journal of Medical Genetics
2023;40(8):1009-1014
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVE:To analyze the clinical and genetic characteristics of an infant with craniosynostosis.
METHODS:An infant who was admitted to Wuhan Children's Hospital Affiliated to Tongji Medical College of Huazhong University of Science and Technology in April 2021 due to widening of the lateral ventricles for over a month was selected as the study subject. Clinical data of the patient was collected. Peripheral blood samples were collected from the infant and her parents for chromosomal karyotyping and whole exome sequencing. Candidate variant was verified by Sanger sequencing and bioinformatic analysis. Relevant literature was retrieved from the PubMed, Wanfang and CNKI databases (up to December 2021) by using key words including ERF gene, craniosynostosis, ERF mutation, craniosynostosis and ERF-related craniosynostosis.
RESULTS:The infant, a 1-month-and-16-day-old female, was found to have sagittal synostosis by cranial X-ray radiography. Genetic testing revealed that she has harbored a heterozygous c.787C>T (p.Q263*) variant of the ERF gene, which was not found in either parent. Based on the guidelines from the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG), the variant was predicted as pathogenic (PVS1+PS2+PM2_Supporting). In total 63 relevant cases were retrieved from the database, and a total of 64 individuals were analyzed by genetic testing. Most of the cases were sporadic and males. Multiple cranial sutures (including at least two of the sagittal suture, coronal suture, lambdoid suture, and frontal suture) were involved in 45.45% of the cases, and those with sagittal suture closure only have accounted for 20.00%. The main clinical manifestations have included hypertelorism, exophthalmos, development delay, malar dysplasia, etc. Chiari type 1 malformation may present in some patients. Variants of the ERF gene have mainly included splicing and deletional variants, and there was a strong genetic heterogeneity among the infants and their pedigrees.
CONCLUSION:The c.787C>T (p.Q263*) variant of the ERF gene probably underlay the craniosynostosis of this infant. Above finding has enriched the phenotype ~ genotype spectrum of the ERF gene.