Alagille Syndrome Mimicking Biliary Atresia in Early Infancy
Author(s) -
Tomáš Dědič,
M Jirsa,
Radan Keil,
Michal Rygl,
J Šnajdauf,
Radana Kotalová
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0143939
Subject(s) - alagille syndrome , jag1 , biliary atresia , atresia , frameshift mutation , neonatal cholestasis , cholestasis , medicine , gastroenterology , charge syndrome , mutation , biology , liver transplantation , genetics , notch signaling pathway , transplantation , receptor , psychiatry , gene
Alagille syndrome may mimic biliary atresia in early infancy. Since mutations in JAG1 typical for Alagille syndrome type 1 have also been found in biliary atresia, we aimed to identify JAG1 mutations in newborns with proven biliary atresia (n = 72). Five biliary atresia patients with cholestasis, one additional characteristic feature of Alagille syndrome and ambiguous liver histology were single heterozygotes for nonsense or frameshift mutations in JAG1 . No mutations were found in the remaining 67 patients. All “biliary atresia” carriers of JAG1 null mutations developed typical Alagille syndrome at the age of three years. Our data do not support association of biliary atresia with JAG1 mutations, at least in Czech patients. Rapid testing for JAG1 mutations could prevent misdiagnosis of Alagille syndrome in early infancy and improve their outcome.
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