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A mutation in TGFB3 associated with a syndrome of low muscle mass, growth retardation, distal arthrogryposis and clinical features overlapping with Marfan and Loeys-Dietz syndrome.

American journal of medical genetics. Part A | 2013

The transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) family of growth factors are key regulators of mammalian development and their dysregulation is implicated in human disease, notably, heritable vasculopathies including Marfan (MFS, OMIM #154700) and Loeys-Dietz syndromes (LDS, OMIM #609192). We described a syndrome presenting at birth with distal arthrogryposis, hypotonia, bifid uvula, a failure of normal post-natal muscle development but no evidence of vascular disease; some of these features overlap with MFS and LDS. A de novo mutation in TGFB3 was identified by exome sequencing. Several lines of evidence indicate the mutation is hypomorphic suggesting that decreased TGF-β signaling from a loss of TGFB3 activity is likely responsible for the clinical phenotype. This is the first example of a mutation in the coding portion of TGFB3 implicated in a clinical syndrome suggesting TGFB3 is essential for both human palatogenesis and normal muscle growth.

Pubmed ID: 23824657 RIS Download

Associated grants

  • Agency: Intramural NIH HHS, United States
    Id: Z99 AG999999

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Human Gene Mutation Database (tool)

RRID:SCR_001621

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RRID:SCR_002338

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RRID:SCR_002760

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RRID:SCR_003496

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RRID:SCR_005780

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RRID:SCR_006437

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RRID:SCR_006552

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RRID:SCR_007000

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RRID:SCR_012761

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RRID:SCR_012821

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