1. Academic Validation
  2. Czech dysplasia: report of a large family and further delineation of the phenotype

Czech dysplasia: report of a large family and further delineation of the phenotype

  • Am J Med Genet A. 2008 Jul 15;146A(14):1859-64. doi: 10.1002/ajmg.a.32389.
Andreas Tzschach 1 Sigrid Tinschert Elke Kaminsky Eugen Lusga Stefan Mundlos Luitgard M Graul-Neumann
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Institute of Medical Genetics, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany. tzschach@molgen.mpg.de
Abstract

Czech dysplasia (OMIM 609162) is a recently delineated COL2A1 disorder characterized by early-onset progressive pseudorheumatoid arthritis, platyspondyly, short third and fourth metatarsals, normal height, and the absence of ophthalmological problems or cleft palate. Czech dysplasia is caused by a specific missense mutation (R275C, c.823C > T) in the triple helical domain of the COL2A1 gene. We report on a large family with 11 patients with typical Czech dysplasia and sensorineural hearing loss. Hearing loss has hitherto not been considered as a major manifestation of Czech dysplasia. Mutation analysis documented the COL2A1 c.823C > T (R275C) mutation in all affected individuals. Thus, Czech dysplasia is possibly caused exclusively by the R275C mutation, which is a unique situation among the COL2A1 disorders. The family provides further evidence for the remarkably uniform manifestation of the clinical and radiological abnormalities and adds hearing loss to the list of major anomalies of Czech dysplasia.

Figures