Journal article

Goldberg–Shprintzen syndrome is determined by the absence, or reduced expression levels, of KIFBP

KC MacKenzie, BM de Graaf, A Syrimis, Y Zhao, E Brosens, GMS Mancini, R Schot, D Halley, M Wilke, A Vøllo, F Flinter, A Green, S Mansour, J Pilch, Z Stark, E Zamba-Papanicolaou, V Christophidou-Anastasiadou, RMW Hofstra, JDH Jongbloed, N Nicolaou Show all

Human Mutation | WILEY-HINDAWI | Published : 2020

Open access

Abstract

Goldberg–Shprintzen syndrome (GOSHS) is caused by loss of function variants in the kinesin binding protein gene (KIFBP). However, the phenotypic range of this syndrome is wide, indicating that other factors may play a role. To date, 37 patients with GOSHS have been reported. Here, we document nine new patients with variants in KIFBP: seven with nonsense variants and two with missense variants. To our knowledge, this is the first time that missense variants have been reported in GOSHS. We functionally investigated the effect of the variants identified, in an attempt to find a genotype–phenotype correlation. We also determined whether common Hirschsprung disease (HSCR)-associated single nucleo..

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University of Melbourne Researchers