학술논문

Phenotypic and mutational spectrum of ROR2‐related Robinow syndrome
Document Type
article
Source
Human Mutation. 43(7)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Genetics
Clinical Research
Pediatric
Congenital Structural Anomalies
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Craniofacial Abnormalities
Dwarfism
Genes
Recessive
Humans
Limb Deformities
Congenital
Male
Phenotype
Receptor Tyrosine Kinase-like Orphan Receptors
Urogenital Abnormalities
chromosome microarray analysis
craniofacial morphology
exonic deletion
HPO terms
next-generation sequencing
quantitative phenotyping cluster heatmap
skeletal dysplasia
WNT pathway
Clinical Sciences
Genetics & Heredity
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
Robinow syndrome is characterized by a triad of craniofacial dysmorphisms, disproportionate-limb short stature, and genital hypoplasia. A significant degree of phenotypic variability seems to correlate with different genes/loci. Disturbances of the noncanonical WNT-pathway have been identified as the main cause of the syndrome. Biallelic variants in ROR2 cause an autosomal recessive form of the syndrome with distinctive skeletal findings. Twenty-two patients with a clinical diagnosis of autosomal recessive Robinow syndrome were screened for variants in ROR2 using multiple molecular approaches. We identified 25 putatively pathogenic ROR2 variants, 16 novel, including single nucleotide variants and exonic deletions. Detailed phenotypic analyses revealed that all subjects presented with a prominent forehead, hypertelorism, short nose, abnormality of the nasal tip, brachydactyly, mesomelic limb shortening, short stature, and genital hypoplasia in male patients. A total of 19 clinical features were present in more than 75% of the subjects, thus pointing to an overall uniformity of the phenotype. Disease-causing variants in ROR2, contribute to a clinically recognizable autosomal recessive trait phenotype with multiple skeletal defects. A comprehensive quantitative clinical evaluation of this cohort delineated the phenotypic spectrum of ROR2-related Robinow syndrome. The identification of exonic deletion variant alleles further supports the contention of a loss-of-function mechanism in the etiology of the syndrome.