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Mutations in the human laminin β2 ( LAMB2 ) gene and the associated phenotypic spectrum a
Author(s) -
Matejas Verena,
Hinkes Bernward,
Alkandari Faisal,
AlGazali Lihadh,
Annexstad Ellen,
Aytac Mehmet B.,
Barrow Margaret,
Bláhová Květa,
Bockenhauer Detlef,
Cheong Hae Il,
MaruniakChudek Iwona,
Cochat Pierre,
Dötsch Jörg,
Gajjar Priya,
Hennekam Raoul C.,
Janssen Françoise,
Kagan Mikhail,
Kariminejad Ariana,
Kemper Markus J.,
Koenig Jens,
Kogan Jillene,
Kroes Hester Y.,
KuwertzBröking Eberhard,
Lewanda Amy F.,
Medeira Ana,
Muscheites Jutta,
Niaudet Patrick,
Pierson Michel,
Saggar Anand,
Seaver Laurie,
Suri Mohnish,
Tsygin Alexey,
Wühl Elke,
Zurowska Aleksandra,
Uebe Steffen,
Hildebrandt Friedhelm,
Antignac Corinne,
Zenker Martin
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
human mutation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.981
H-Index - 162
eISSN - 1098-1004
pISSN - 1059-7794
DOI - 10.1002/humu.21304
Subject(s) - biology , phenotype , gene , genetics , laminin , mutation , computational biology , extracellular matrix
Mutations of LAMB2 typically cause autosomal recessive Pierson syndrome, a disorder characterized by congenital nephrotic syndrome, ocular and neurologic abnormalities, but may occasionally be associated with milder or oligosymptomatic disease variants. LAMB2 encodes the basement membrane protein laminin β2, which is incorporated in specific heterotrimeric laminin isoforms and has an expression pattern corresponding to the pattern of organ manifestations in Pierson syndrome. Herein we review all previously reported and several novel LAMB2 mutations in relation to the associated phenotype in patients from 39 unrelated families. The majority of disease‐causing LAMB2 mutations are truncating, consistent with the hypothesis that loss of laminin β2 function is the molecular basis of Pierson syndrome. Although truncating mutations are distributed across the entire gene, missense mutations are clearly clustered in the N‐terminal LN domain, which is important for intermolecular interactions. There is an association of missense mutations and small in frame deletions with a higher mean age at onset of renal disease and with absence of neurologic abnormalities, thus suggesting that at least some of these may represent hypomorphic alleles. Nevertheless, genotype alone does not appear to explain the full range of clinical variability, and therefore hitherto unidentified modifiers are likely to exist. Hum Mutat 31:992–1002, 2010. © 2010 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.