Síndrome genética dismórfica/de anomalias congénitas múltiplas, rara, caracterizada por restrição de crescimento intrauterino grave, microcefalia profunda, características craniofaciais dismórficas (como craniossinostose e aparência facial distintiva com fendas palpebrais curtas, nariz largo e e em forma de bico, microstomia, micrognatia, orelhas baixamente implantadas e pescoço curto) e malformações variáveis ​​dos membros, especialmente dos braços. Também foram reportadas anomalias cardíacas, gastrointestinais e geniturinárias. A imagem cerebral mostra anomalias da substância cinzenta e branca e hipoplasia ou ausência do corpo caloso. A doença é comummente fatal do período fetal ao neonatal devido a insuficiência respiratória.
Introdução
O que você precisa saber de cara
Síndrome genética dismórfica/de anomalias congénitas múltiplas, rara, caracterizada por restrição de crescimento intrauterino grave, microcefalia profunda, características craniofaciais dismórficas (como craniossinostose e aparência facial distintiva com fendas palpebrais curtas, nariz largo e e em forma de bico, microstomia, micrognatia, orelhas baixamente implantadas e pescoço curto) e malformações variáveis dos membros, especialmente dos braços. Também foram relatadas anomalias cardíacas, gastrointestinais e geniturinárias. A imagem cerebral mostra anomalias da substância cinzenta e branca e hipoplasia ou ausência de corpo caloso. A doença é comumente fatal no período fetal ao neonatal devido a insuficiência respiratória.
Escala de raridade
<1/50kMuito rara
1/20kRara
1/10kPouco freq.
1/5kIncomum
1/2k
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Entender a doença
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Sinais e sintomas
O que aparece no corpo e com que frequência cada sintoma acontece
Partes do corpo afetadas
+ 18 sintomas em outras categorias
Características mais comuns
Os sintomas variam de pessoa para pessoa. Abaixo estão as 31 características clínicas mais associadas, ordenadas por frequência.
Linha do tempo da pesquisa
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Genética e causas
O que está alterado no DNA e como passa nas famílias
Genes associados
1 gene identificado com associação a esta condição. Padrão de herança: Autosomal recessive.
Replisome component that maintains genome stability by protecting stalled or damaged replication forks. After the induction of replication stress, required for the stabilization of stalled replication forks, the efficient activation of the intra-S-phase and G/2M cell-cycle checkpoints and the maintenance of genome stability
Nucleus
Microcephaly-micromelia syndrome
A severe autosomal recessive disorder characterized by intrauterine growth restriction, marked microcephaly, craniofacial anomalies, skeletal dysplasia, and variable malformations of the limbs, particularly the upper limbs. It usually results in death in utero or in the perinatal period.
Variantes genéticas (ClinVar)
132 variantes patogênicas registradas no ClinVar.
Classificação de variantes (ClinVar)
Distribuição de 8 variantes classificadas pelo ClinVar.
Diagnóstico
Os sinais que médicos procuram e os exames que confirmam
Tratamento e manejo
Remédios, cuidados de apoio e o que precisa acompanhar
Onde tratar no SUS
Hospitais de referência no Brasil e o protocolo oficial do SUS (PCDT)
🇧🇷 Atendimento SUS — Síndrome de microcefalia-micromelia
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Dados de DATASUS/CNES, SBGM, ABNeuro e Ministério da Saúde. Sempre confirme a disponibilidade diretamente com o estabelecimento.
Pesquisa ativa
Ensaios clínicos abertos e novidades científicas recentes
Pesquisa e ensaios clínicos
Nenhum ensaio clínico registrado para esta condição.
Publicações mais relevantes
Linked-read genome sequencing identifies biallelic pathogenic variants in DONSON as a novel cause of Meier-Gorlin syndrome.
Linked-read whole genome sequencing (WGS) presents a new opportunity for cost-efficient singleton sequencing in place of traditional trio-based designs while generating informative-phased variants, effective for recessive disorders when parental DNA is unavailable. We have applied linked-read WGS to identify novel causes of Meier-Gorlin syndrome (MGORS), a condition recognised by short stature, microtia and patella hypo/aplasia. There are eight genes associated with MGORS to date, all encoding essential components involved in establishing and initiating DNA replication. Our successful phasing of linked-read data led to the identification of biallelic rare variants in four individuals (24% of our cohort) in DONSON, a recently established DNA replication fork surveillance factor. The variants include five novel missense and one deep intronic variant. All were demonstrated to be deleterious to function; the missense variants all disrupted the nuclear localisation of DONSON, while the intronic variant created a novel splice site that generated an out-of-frame transcript with no residual canonical transcript produced. Variants in DONSON have previously been associated with extreme microcephaly, short stature and limb anomalies and perinatal lethal microcephaly-micromelia syndrome. Our novel genetic findings extend the complicated spectrum of phenotypes associated with DONSON variants and promote novel hypotheses for the role of DONSON in DNA replication. While our findings reiterate that MGORS is a disorder of DNA replication, the pathophysiology is obviously complex. This successful identification of a novel disease gene for MGORS highlights the utility of linked-read WGS as a successful technology to be considered in the genetic studies of recessive conditions.
Biallelic and De Novo Variants in DONSON Reveal a Clinical Spectrum of Cell Cycle-opathies with Microcephaly, Dwarfism and Skeletal Abnormalities.
Co-occurrence of primordial dwarfism and microcephaly together with particular skeletal findings are seen in a wide range of Mendelian syndromes including microcephaly micromelia syndrome (MMS, OMIM 251230), microcephaly, short stature, and limb abnormalities (MISSLA, OMIM 617604), and microcephalic primordial dwarfisms (MPDs). Genes associated with these syndromes encode proteins that have crucial roles in DNA replication or in other critical steps of the cell cycle that link DNA replication to cell division. We identified four unrelated families with five affected individuals having biallelic or de novo variants in DONSON presenting with a core phenotype of severe short stature (z score < -3 SD), additional skeletal abnormalities, and microcephaly. Two apparently unrelated families with identical homozygous c.631C > T p.(Arg211Cys) variant had clinical features typical of Meier-Gorlin syndrome (MGS), while two siblings with compound heterozygous c.346delG p.(Asp116Ile*62) and c.1349A > G p.(Lys450Arg) variants presented with Seckel-like phenotype. We also identified a de novo c.683G > T p.(Trp228Leu) variant in DONSON in a patient with prominent micrognathia, short stature and hypoplastic femur and tibia, clinically diagnosed with Femoral-Facial syndrome (FFS, OMIM 134780). Biallelic variants in DONSON have been recently described in individuals with microcephalic dwarfism. These studies also demonstrated that DONSON has an essential conserved role in the cell cycle. Here we describe novel biallelic and de novo variants that are associated with MGS, Seckel-like phenotype and FFS, the last of which has not been associated with any disease gene to date.
Further Delineation of the Microcephaly-Micromelia Syndrome Associated with Loss-of-Function Variants in DONSON.
The DONSON gene encodes the downstream neighbor of SON, a replisome component that stabilizes the replication fork during replication. A severe form of microcephalic dwarfism, microcephaly-micromelia syndrome (MIMIS), has been recently associated with DONSON biallelic loss of function. Affected fetuses suffer severe growth restriction, microcephaly, and variable limb malformations which result in intrauterine or perinatal death. All described fetuses carried a homozygous founder mutation (c.1047-9A>G), a splice-altering variant that leads to transcript degradation. We evaluated 2 newborns from a consanguineous Emirati family with severe microcephaly, micromelia, craniofacial dysmorphism, and skeletal abnormalities; both died shortly after birth. Here, we report the second homozygous loss-of-function variant (c.763C>T) in DONSON causing MIMIS, and we provide detailed clinical description of this very rare disorder. In addition, we review all MIMIS cases in the literature and summarize the striking features of this phenotype. This manuscript is aimed to increase the clinical understanding of this rare, extremely severe disorder and encourage clinical and molecular geneticists to consider screening for DONSON loss-of-function variants in families with recurrent pregnancy loss and/or perinatal deaths.
Integrated genome and transcriptome sequencing identifies a noncoding mutation in the genome replication factor DONSON as the cause of microcephaly-micromelia syndrome.
While next-generation sequencing has accelerated the discovery of human disease genes, progress has been largely limited to the "low hanging fruit" of mutations with obvious exonic coding or canonical splice site impact. In contrast, the lack of high-throughput, unbiased approaches for functional assessment of most noncoding variants has bottlenecked gene discovery. We report the integration of transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq), which surveys all mRNAs to reveal functional impacts of variants at the transcription level, into the gene discovery framework for a unique human disease, microcephaly-micromelia syndrome (MMS). MMS is an autosomal recessive condition described thus far in only a single First Nations population and causes intrauterine growth restriction, severe microcephaly, craniofacial anomalies, skeletal dysplasia, and neonatal lethality. Linkage analysis of affected families, including a very large pedigree, identified a single locus on Chromosome 21 linked to the disease (LOD > 9). Comprehensive genome sequencing did not reveal any pathogenic coding or canonical splicing mutations within the linkage region but identified several nonconserved noncoding variants. RNA-seq analysis detected aberrant splicing in DONSON due to one of these noncoding variants, showing a causative role for DONSON disruption in MMS. We show that DONSON is expressed in progenitor cells of embryonic human brain and other proliferating tissues, is co-expressed with components of the DNA replication machinery, and that Donson is essential for early embryonic development in mice as well, suggesting an essential conserved role for DONSON in the cell cycle. Our results demonstrate the utility of integrating transcriptomics into the study of human genetic disease when DNA sequencing alone is not sufficient to reveal the underlying pathogenic mutation.
Publicações recentes
Linked-read genome sequencing identifies biallelic pathogenic variants in DONSON as a novel cause of Meier-Gorlin syndrome.
Biallelic and De Novo Variants in DONSON Reveal a Clinical Spectrum of Cell Cycle-opathies with Microcephaly, Dwarfism and Skeletal Abnormalities.
🥉 Relato de casoFurther Delineation of the Microcephaly-Micromelia Syndrome Associated with Loss-of-Function Variants in DONSON.
Integrated genome and transcriptome sequencing identifies a noncoding mutation in the genome replication factor DONSON as the cause of microcephaly-micromelia syndrome.
📚 EuropePMC2 artigos no totalmostrando 4
Linked-read genome sequencing identifies biallelic pathogenic variants in DONSON as a novel cause of Meier-Gorlin syndrome.
Journal of medical geneticsBiallelic and De Novo Variants in DONSON Reveal a Clinical Spectrum of Cell Cycle-opathies with Microcephaly, Dwarfism and Skeletal Abnormalities.
American journal of medical genetics. Part AFurther Delineation of the Microcephaly-Micromelia Syndrome Associated with Loss-of-Function Variants in DONSON.
Molecular syndromologyIntegrated genome and transcriptome sequencing identifies a noncoding mutation in the genome replication factor DONSON as the cause of microcephaly-micromelia syndrome.
Genome researchAssociações
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Comunidades
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Referências e fontes
Bases de dados externas citadas neste artigo
Publicações científicas
Artigos indexados no PubMed ligados a esta doença no grafo RarasNet — título, periódico e PMID direto da fonte, sem intermediação de IA.
- Linked-read genome sequencing identifies biallelic pathogenic variants in DONSON as a novel cause of Meier-Gorlin syndrome.
- Biallelic and De Novo Variants in DONSON Reveal a Clinical Spectrum of Cell Cycle-opathies with Microcephaly, Dwarfism and Skeletal Abnormalities.
- Further Delineation of the Microcephaly-Micromelia Syndrome Associated with Loss-of-Function Variants in DONSON.
- Integrated genome and transcriptome sequencing identifies a noncoding mutation in the genome replication factor DONSON as the cause of microcephaly-micromelia syndrome.
Bases de dados e fontes oficiais
Identificadores e referências canônicas usadas para montar este verbete.
- ORPHA:572768(Orphanet)
- OMIM OMIM:251230(OMIM)
- MONDO:0009619(MONDO)
- GARD:18011(GARD (NIH))
- Variantes catalogadas(ClinVar)
- Busca completa no PubMed(PubMed)
- Q55782099(Wikidata)
Dados compilados pelo RarasNet a partir de fontes abertas (Orphanet, OMIM, MONDO, PubMed/EuropePMC, ClinicalTrials.gov, DATASUS, PCDT/MS). Este conteúdo é informativo e não substitui avaliação médica.
Conteúdo mantido por Agente Raras · Médicos e pesquisadores podem colaborar
