Artículo de revista
Heterozygous Mutations in Natriuretic Peptide Receptor-B (NPR2) Gene as a Cause of Short Stature
Fecha
2015Registro en:
Human Mutation, Vol. 36, No. 4, 474–481, 2015
DOI: 10.1002/humu.22773
Autor
Wang, Sophie
Jacobsen, Christina
Carmichael, Heather
Edmund, Aaron
Robinson, Jerid
Olney, Robert
Miller, Timothy C.
Moon, Jennifer E.
Mericq, Verónica
Potter, Lincoln R.
Warman, Matthew L.
Hirschhorn, Joel N.
Dauber, Andrew
Institución
Resumen
Based on the observation of reduced stature
in relatives of patients with acromesomelic dysplasia,
Maroteaux type (AMDM), caused by homozygous or
compound heterozygous mutations in natriuretic peptide
receptor-B gene (NPR2), it has been suggested that heterozygous
mutations in this gene could be responsible for
the growth impairment observed in some cases of idiopathic
short stature (ISS). We enrolled 192 unrelated
patients with short stature and 192 controls of normal
height and identified seven heterozygous NPR2 missense
or splice site mutations all in the short stature patients,
including one de novo splice site variant. Three of the
six inherited variants segregated with short stature in the
family. Nine additional rare nonsynonymous NPR2 variants
were found in three additional cohorts. Functional
studies identified eight loss-of-function mutations in short
individuals and one gain-of-function mutation in tall individuals.
With these data, we were able to rigorously verify
that NPR2 functional haploinsufficiency contributes to
short stature. We estimate a prevalence of NPR2 haploinsufficiency
of between 0 and 1/26 in people with ISS.