
Identifying pathogenic variants in the Follistatin‐like 1 gene ( FSTL1 ) in patients with skeletal and atrioventricular valve disorders
Author(s) -
Prakash Stuti,
Mattiotti Andrea,
Sylva Marc,
Mulder Barbara J. M.,
Postma Alex V.,
van den Hoff Maurice J. B.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
molecular genetics and genomic medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.765
H-Index - 29
ISSN - 2324-9269
DOI - 10.1002/mgg3.567
Subject(s) - atrioventricular septal defect , phenotype , sanger sequencing , follistatin , kyphoscoliosis , atrioventricular valve , biology , genetics , minor allele frequency , medicine , gene , mutation , pathology , single nucleotide polymorphism , heart disease , genotype , endocrinology , scoliosis , ventricle
Background Follistatin‐like 1 (Fstl1) is a glycoprotein expressed throughout embryonic development. Homozygous loss of Fstl1 in mice results in skeletal and respiratory defects, leading to neonatal death due to a collapse of the trachea. Furthermore, Fstl1 conditional deletion from the endocardial/endothelial lineage results in postnatal death due to heart failure and profound atrioventricular valve defects. Here, we investigated patients with phenotypes similar to the phenotypes observed in the transgenic mice, for variants in FSTL1 . Methods In total, 69 genetically unresolved patients were selected with the following phenotypes: campomelic dysplasia (12), small patella syndrome (2), BILU (1), and congenital heart disease patients (54), of which 16 also had kyphoscoliosis, and 38 had valve abnormalities as their main diagnosis. Using qPCR, none of 69 patients showed copy number variations in FSTL1 . The entire gene body, including microRNA‐198 and three validated microRNA‐binding sites, were analyzed using Sanger sequencing. Results No variants were found in the coding region. However, 8 intronic variants were identified that differed significantly in their minor allele frequency compared to controls. Variant rs2272515 was found to significantly correlate ( p < 0.05) with kyphoscoliosis. Conclusion We conclude that pathogenic variants in FSTL1 are unlikely to be responsible for skeletal or atrioventricular valve anomalies in humans.