SOX10 mutations in patients with Waardenburg-Hirschsprung disease
- 1 February 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Genetics
- Vol. 18 (2), 171-173
- https://doi.org/10.1038/ng0298-171
Abstract
Waardenburg syndrome (WS; deafness with pigmentary abnormalities) and Hirschsprung's disease (HSCR; aganglionic megacolon) are congenital disorders caused by defective function of the embryonic neural crest1,2. WS and HSCR are associated in patients with Waardenburg-Shah syndrome (WS4), whose symptoms are reminiscent of the white coat-spotting and aganglionic megacolon displayed by the mouse mutants Dom (Dominant megacolon), piebald-lethal (sl) and lethal spotting (Is). The sl and Is phenotypes are caused by mutations in the genes encoding the Endothelin-B receptor (Ednrb) and Endothelin 3 (Edn3), respectively3,4. The identification of Sox10 as the gene mutated in Dom mice (B.H. et al., manuscript submitted) prompted us to analyse the role of its human homologue SOx10 in neural crest defects. Here we show that patients from four families with WS4 have mutations in SOx10, whereas no mutation could be detected in patients with HSCR alone. These mutations are likely to result in haploinsufficiency of the SOx10 product. Our findings further define the locus heterogeneity of Waardenburg-Hirschsprung syndromes, and point to an essential role of SOx10 in the development of two neural crest-derived human cell lineages.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Human Homology and Candidate Genes for theDominant megacolonLocus, a Mouse Model of Hirschsprung DiseaseGenomics, 1997
- Neuronal defects in genotyped dominant megacolon (Dom) mouse embryos, a model for Hirschsprung diseaseNeuroReport, 1996
- Solution Structure of the Sequence-specific HMG Box of the Lymphocyte Transcriptional Activator Sox-4Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1995
- Interaction of endothelin-3 with endothelin-B receptor is essential for development of epidermal melanocytes and enteric neuronsCell, 1994
- Targeted and natural (piebald-lethal) mutations of endothelin-B receptor gene produce megacolon associated with spotted coat color in miceCell, 1994
- A missense mutation of the endothelin-B receptor gene in multigenic hirschsprung's diseaseCell, 1994
- Human haploinsufficiency — one for sorrow, two for joyNature Genetics, 1994
- Waardenburg syndrome, Hirschsprung megacolon, and Marcus Gunn ptosisAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics, 1987
- Waardenburg and Hirschsprung syndromesThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1983
- Waardenburg's Syndrome and Hirschsprung's Disease in the same PatientClinical Genetics, 1980