4.5 Article

Germline BRAF Mutations in Noonan, LEOPARD, and Cardiofaciocutaneous Syndromes: Molecular Diversity and Associated Phenotypic Spectrum

Journal

HUMAN MUTATION
Volume 30, Issue 4, Pages 695-702

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/humu.20955

Keywords

noonan syndrome; LEOPARD syndrome; cardiofaciocutaneous syndrome; BRAF; CFCS; mutation analysis; genotype-phenotype correlation; functional studies

Funding

  1. Telethon-Italy [GGP07115]
  2. Programma di Collaborazione Italia-USA/malattie rare 2007
  3. U.S. National Institutes of Health [HL71207, HD01294, HL074728]
  4. Italian Ministry of Health [RC 2007, 2008]
  5. Regione Piemonte Ricerca Sanitaria Finalizzata 2006-2007

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Noonan, LEOPARD, and cardiofaciocutaneous Syndromes (NS, LS, and CFCS) are developmental disorders with overlapping features including distinctive facial dysmorphia, reduced growth, cardiac defects, skeletal and ectodermal anomalies, and variable cognitive deficits. Dysregulated RAS-mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signal traffic has been established to represent the molecular pathogenic cause underlying these conditions. To investigate the phenotypic spectrum and molecular diversity of germline mutations affecting BRAF, which encodes a serine/threonine kinase functioning as a RAS effector frequently mutated in CFCS, subjects with a diagnosis of NS (N = 270), LS (N = 6), and CFCS (N = 33), and no mutation in PTPN11, SOS1, KRAS, RAF1, MEK1, or MEK2, were screened for the entire coding sequence of the gene. Besides the expected high prevalence of mutations observed among CFCS patients (5296), a de novo heterozygous missense change was identified in one subject with LS (17%) and five individuals with NS (1.9%). Mutations mapped to multiple protein domains and largely did not overlap with cancer-associated defects. NS-causing mutations had not been documented in CFCS, suggesting that the phenotypes arising from germline BRAF defects might be allele specific. Selected mutant BRAF proteins promoted variable gain of function of the kinase, but appeared less activating compared to the recurrent cancer-associated p.Val600Glu mutant. Our findings provide evidence for a wide phenotypic diversity associated with mutations affecting BRAF, and occurrence of a clinical continuum associated with these molecular lesions. Hum Mutat 30, 695-702, 2009. (C) 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available