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Exome Sequencing Identifies INPPL1 Mutations as a Cause of Opsismodysplasia
Authors:Céline Huber  Eissa?Ali Faqeih  Deborah Bartholdi  Christine Bole-Feysot  Zvi Borochowitz  Denise P. Cavalcanti  Amandine Frigo  Patrick Nitschke  Joelle Roume  Heloísa?G. Santos  Stavit?A. Shalev  Andrea Superti-Furga  Anne-Lise Delezoide  Martine Le?Merrer  Arnold Munnich  Valérie Cormier-Daire
Abstract:Opsismodysplasia (OPS) is a severe autosomal-recessive chondrodysplasia characterized by pre- and postnatal micromelia with extremely short hands and feet. The main radiological features are severe platyspondyly, squared metacarpals, delayed skeletal ossification, and metaphyseal cupping. In order to identify mutations causing OPS, a total of 16 cases (7 terminated pregnancies and 9 postnatal cases) from 10 unrelated families were included in this study. We performed exome sequencing in three cases from three unrelated families and only one gene was found to harbor mutations in all three cases: inositol polyphosphate phosphatase-like 1 (INPPL1). Screening INPPL1 in the remaining cases identified a total of 12 distinct INPPL1 mutations in the 10 families, present at the homozygote state in 7 consanguinous families and at the compound heterozygote state in the 3 remaining families. Most mutations (6/12) resulted in premature stop codons, 2/12 were splice site, and 4/12 were missense mutations located in the catalytic domain, 5-phosphatase. INPPL1 belongs to the inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate 5-phosphatase family, a family of signal-modulating enzymes that govern a plethora of cellular functions by regulating the levels of specific phosphoinositides. Our finding of INPPL1 mutations in OPS, a severe spondylodysplastic dysplasia with major growth plate disorganization, supports a key and specific role of this enzyme in endochondral ossification.
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