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GM20466 LCL from B-Lymphocyte

Description:

ROBERTS SYNDROME; RBS
ESTABLISHMENT OF COHESION 1, S. CERVISIAE, HOMOLOG OF, 2; ESCO2

Affected:

Yes

Sex:

Female

Age:

34 YR (At Sampling)

  • Overview
  • Characterizations
  • Phenotypic Data
  • Publications
  • External Links
  • Culture Protocols

Overview

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Repository NIGMS Human Genetic Cell Repository
Subcollection Heritable Diseases
Class Disorders of Connective Tissue, Muscle, and Bone
Biopsy Source Peripheral vein
Cell Type B-Lymphocyte
Tissue Type Blood
Transformant Epstein-Barr Virus
Sample Source LCL from B-Lymphocyte
Race White
Family Member 1
Relation to Proband proband
Confirmation Clinical summary/Case history
Species Homo sapiens
Common Name Human
Remarks Clinically affected; formerly AG04344; congenital cranial nerve palsies (VII and IX or X); short stature; microcephaly; broad, high forehead; beaked nose; high nasal bridge; hypoplastic mid-face (cartilage of tip and nasal alae) with anteverted nares; intact palate; short philtrum and down-turned mouth; small eyes with blepharochalasis; optic nerve pit of the right optic disc; hypoplastic scapulae, humerii, and ulnae with absent radii and metacarpals I and V; absent thumbs; two of the remaining four fingers arose from bifid IVth metacarpals; great toes were short with wide first interdigital space; absent iliac horns and hypoplastic patellae, distal tibiae and fibulae; small vertebrae; thoracic kyphoscoliosis; mild pulmonic valve stenosis; scotoma of right eye; mild mental retardation (IQ = 66); diabetes mellitus diagnosed at age 32 controlled by diet; malignant melanoma of left scapular area of upper back treated surgically only; patient died 3 years after excision of the primary tumor; autopsy revealed widely metastatic melanoma; an older sister has same features with some additional skeletal anomalies (complete fusion of short ulnae with hypoplastic humerii and absent left patella and tibiae), but with no cancer; premature separation of centromeres (PCS) of sister chromatids in leukocytes, EBV virus-transformed lymphoblasts, skin fibroblasts, and metastatic melanoma cells; donor subject is a compound heterozygote: one allele has a C>T transition at nucleotide 604 in exon 3 of the ESCO2 gene [604C>T] resulting in a substitution of a termination signal for glutamine at codon 202 [Gln202Ter (Q202X)] and a second allele has a single-nucleotide deletion at nucleotide 752 in exon 3 of the ESCO2 gene [752delA] resulting in a frameshift with a truncated protein [K253fsX12]; same donor is GM20467 fibroblast.

Characterizations

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Gene ESCO2
Chromosomal Location 8p21.1
Allelic Variant 1 Q202X; ROBERTS SYNDROME
Identified Mutation GLN202TER
 
Gene ESCO2
Chromosomal Location 8p21.1
Allelic Variant 2 609353.0007; ROBERTS SYNDROME
Identified Mutation 752delA

Phenotypic Data

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Remarks Clinically affected; formerly AG04344; congenital cranial nerve palsies (VII and IX or X); short stature; microcephaly; broad, high forehead; beaked nose; high nasal bridge; hypoplastic mid-face (cartilage of tip and nasal alae) with anteverted nares; intact palate; short philtrum and down-turned mouth; small eyes with blepharochalasis; optic nerve pit of the right optic disc; hypoplastic scapulae, humerii, and ulnae with absent radii and metacarpals I and V; absent thumbs; two of the remaining four fingers arose from bifid IVth metacarpals; great toes were short with wide first interdigital space; absent iliac horns and hypoplastic patellae, distal tibiae and fibulae; small vertebrae; thoracic kyphoscoliosis; mild pulmonic valve stenosis; scotoma of right eye; mild mental retardation (IQ = 66); diabetes mellitus diagnosed at age 32 controlled by diet; malignant melanoma of left scapular area of upper back treated surgically only; patient died 3 years after excision of the primary tumor; autopsy revealed widely metastatic melanoma; an older sister has same features with some additional skeletal anomalies (complete fusion of short ulnae with hypoplastic humerii and absent left patella and tibiae), but with no cancer; premature separation of centromeres (PCS) of sister chromatids in leukocytes, EBV virus-transformed lymphoblasts, skin fibroblasts, and metastatic melanoma cells; donor subject is a compound heterozygote: one allele has a C>T transition at nucleotide 604 in exon 3 of the ESCO2 gene [604C>T] resulting in a substitution of a termination signal for glutamine at codon 202 [Gln202Ter (Q202X)] and a second allele has a single-nucleotide deletion at nucleotide 752 in exon 3 of the ESCO2 gene [752delA] resulting in a frameshift with a truncated protein [K253fsX12]; same donor is GM20467 fibroblast.

Publications

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Birgitt Schule, Angelica Oviedo, Kathreen Johnston, Shashidhar Pai, anf Uta Francke, Inactivating mutations in ESCO2 cause SC phocomelia and Roberts syndrome: no phenotype-genotype correlation Am J Hum Genet77:1117-1128 2005
PubMed ID:
 
Krassikoff NE, Cowan JM, Parry DM, Francke U, Chromatid repulsion associated with Roberts/SC phocomelia syndrome is reduced in malignant cells and not expressed in interspecies somatic- cell hybrids. Am J Hum Genet39:618-30 1986
PubMed ID: 3788975
 
Parry DM, Mulvihill JJ, Tsai SE, Kaiser-Kupfer MI, Cowan JM, SC phocomelia syndrome, premature centromere separation, and congenital cranial nerve paralysis in two sisters, one with malignant melanoma. Am J Med Genet24(4):653-72 1986
PubMed ID: 3740099

External Links

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Gene Cards ESCO2
NCBI Gene Gene ID:5951
NCBI GTR 268300 ROBERTS SYNDROME; RBS
609353 ESTABLISHMENT OF SISTER CHROMATID COHESION N-ACEYTLTRANSFERASE 2; ESCO2
OMIM 268300 ROBERTS SYNDROME; RBS
609353 ESTABLISHMENT OF SISTER CHROMATID COHESION N-ACEYTLTRANSFERASE 2; ESCO2
Omim Description ROBERTS SYNDROME; RBS
  SEVERE ABSENCE DEFORMITIES, OR DEFICIENCIES, OF LONG BONES OF LIMBSASSOCIATED WITH CLEFT LIP-PALATE

Culture Protocols

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Split Ratio 1:5
Temperature 37 C
Percent CO2 5%
Medium Roswell Park Memorial Institute Medium 1640 with 2mM L-glutamine or equivalent
Serum 15% fetal bovine serum Not Inactivated
Substrate None specified
Subcultivation Method dilution - add fresh medium
Supplement -
Pricing
International/Commercial/For-profit:
$373.00USD
U.S. Academic/Non-profit/Government:
$216.00USD
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