Somatic mosaicism has been implicated as a causative mechanism in a number of genetic and genomic disorders. X-linked acrogigantism (XLAG)syndrome is a recently characterized genomic form of pediatric gigantism due to aggressive pituitary tumors that is caused by submicroscopic chromosome Xq26.3 duplications that include GPR101. We studied XLAG syndrome patients (n = 18)to determine if somatic mosaicism contributed to the genomic pathophysiology. Eighteen subjects with XLAG syndrome caused by Xq26.3 duplications were identified using high-definition array comparative genomic hybridization (HD-aCGH). We noted that males with XLAG had a decreased log2 ratio (LR)compared with expected values, suggesting potential mosaicism, whereas females showed no such decrease. Compared with familial male XLAG cases, sporadic males had more marked evidence for mosaicism, with levels of Xq26.3 duplication between 16.1 and 53.8% These characteristics were replicated using a novel, personalized breakpoint junction-specific quantification droplet digital polymerase chain reaction (ddPCR)technique. Using a separate ddPCR technique, we studied the feasibility of identifying XLAG syndrome cases in a distinct patient population of 64 unrelated subjects with acromegaly/gigantism, and identified one female gigantism patient who had had increased copy number variation (CNV)threshold for GPR101 that was subsequently diagnosed as having XLAG syndrome on HD-aCGH. Employing a combination of HD-aCGH and novel ddPCR approaches, we have demonstrated, for the first time, that XLAG syndrome can be caused by variable degrees of somatic mosaicism for duplications at chromosome Xq26.3. Somatic mosaicism was shown to occur in sporadic males but not in females with XLAG syndrome, although the clinical characteristics of the disease were similarly severe in both sexes.

Somatic mosaicism underlies X-linked acrogigantism syndrome in sporadic male subjects / A.F. Daly, B. Yuan, F. Fina, J. Caberg, G. Trivellin, L. Rostomyan, W.W. De Herder, L.A. Naves, D. Metzger, T. Cuny, W. Rabl, N. Shah, M. Jaffrain-Rea, M. Chiara Zatelli, F.R. Faucz, E. Castermans, I. Nanni-Metellus, M. Lodish, A. Muhammad, L. Palmeira, I. Potorac, G. Mantovani, S.J. Neggers, M. Klein, A. Barlier, P. Liu, L. Ouafik, V. Bours, J.R. Lupski, C.A. Stratakis, A. Beckers. - In: ENDOCRINE-RELATED CANCER. - ISSN 1351-0088. - 23:4(2016), pp. 221-233.

Somatic mosaicism underlies X-linked acrogigantism syndrome in sporadic male subjects

G. Mantovani;
2016

Abstract

Somatic mosaicism has been implicated as a causative mechanism in a number of genetic and genomic disorders. X-linked acrogigantism (XLAG)syndrome is a recently characterized genomic form of pediatric gigantism due to aggressive pituitary tumors that is caused by submicroscopic chromosome Xq26.3 duplications that include GPR101. We studied XLAG syndrome patients (n = 18)to determine if somatic mosaicism contributed to the genomic pathophysiology. Eighteen subjects with XLAG syndrome caused by Xq26.3 duplications were identified using high-definition array comparative genomic hybridization (HD-aCGH). We noted that males with XLAG had a decreased log2 ratio (LR)compared with expected values, suggesting potential mosaicism, whereas females showed no such decrease. Compared with familial male XLAG cases, sporadic males had more marked evidence for mosaicism, with levels of Xq26.3 duplication between 16.1 and 53.8% These characteristics were replicated using a novel, personalized breakpoint junction-specific quantification droplet digital polymerase chain reaction (ddPCR)technique. Using a separate ddPCR technique, we studied the feasibility of identifying XLAG syndrome cases in a distinct patient population of 64 unrelated subjects with acromegaly/gigantism, and identified one female gigantism patient who had had increased copy number variation (CNV)threshold for GPR101 that was subsequently diagnosed as having XLAG syndrome on HD-aCGH. Employing a combination of HD-aCGH and novel ddPCR approaches, we have demonstrated, for the first time, that XLAG syndrome can be caused by variable degrees of somatic mosaicism for duplications at chromosome Xq26.3. Somatic mosaicism was shown to occur in sporadic males but not in females with XLAG syndrome, although the clinical characteristics of the disease were similarly severe in both sexes.
English
gigantism; molecular genetics; mosaicism; pituitary; X-LAG syndrome; endocrinology, diabetes and metabolism; oncology; endocrinology; cancer research
Settore MED/13 - Endocrinologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Ricerca applicata
Pubblicazione scientifica
2016
BioScientifica
23
4
221
233
13
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
pubmed
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Somatic mosaicism underlies X-linked acrogigantism syndrome in sporadic male subjects / A.F. Daly, B. Yuan, F. Fina, J. Caberg, G. Trivellin, L. Rostomyan, W.W. De Herder, L.A. Naves, D. Metzger, T. Cuny, W. Rabl, N. Shah, M. Jaffrain-Rea, M. Chiara Zatelli, F.R. Faucz, E. Castermans, I. Nanni-Metellus, M. Lodish, A. Muhammad, L. Palmeira, I. Potorac, G. Mantovani, S.J. Neggers, M. Klein, A. Barlier, P. Liu, L. Ouafik, V. Bours, J.R. Lupski, C.A. Stratakis, A. Beckers. - In: ENDOCRINE-RELATED CANCER. - ISSN 1351-0088. - 23:4(2016), pp. 221-233.
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Article (author)
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A.F. Daly, B. Yuan, F. Fina, J. Caberg, G. Trivellin, L. Rostomyan, W.W. De Herder, L.A. Naves, D. Metzger, T. Cuny, W. Rabl, N. Shah, M. Jaffrain-Rea, M. Chiara Zatelli, F.R. Faucz, E. Castermans, I. Nanni-Metellus, M. Lodish, A. Muhammad, L. Palmeira, I. Potorac, G. Mantovani, S.J. Neggers, M. Klein, A. Barlier, P. Liu, L. Ouafik, V. Bours, J.R. Lupski, C.A. Stratakis, A. Beckers
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/456343
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