Short stature and SHOX (Short stature homeobox) variants—efficacy of screening using various strategies

Background SHOX mutations have previously been described as causes of Léri-Weill dyschondrosteosis (LWD), Langer mesomelic dysplasia (LMD), and idiopathic short stature. The loss of X chromosome—Turner syndrome or mosaic 45,X/46,XX or 46,XY—also leads to the heterozygous loss of SHOX in patients wit...

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Main Authors: Pavlina Capkova, Zuzana Capkova, Peter Rohon, Katerina Adamová, Jirina Zapletalova
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2020-11-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/10236.pdf
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spelling doaj-8187f978299a4806ba57cc668b887b152020-11-25T04:01:23ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592020-11-018e1023610.7717/peerj.10236Short stature and SHOX (Short stature homeobox) variants—efficacy of screening using various strategiesPavlina Capkova0Zuzana Capkova1Peter Rohon2Katerina Adamová3Jirina Zapletalova4Department of Medical Genetics, University Hospital Olomouc, Olomouc, Czech RepublicDepartment of Medical Genetics, University Hospital Olomouc, Olomouc, Czech RepublicDepartment of Medical Genetics, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Palacky University Olomouc, Olomouc, Czech RepublicDepartment of Medical Genetics, University Hospital Olomouc, Olomouc, Czech RepublicDepartment of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, Palacky University Olomouc, Olomouc, Czech RepublicBackground SHOX mutations have previously been described as causes of Léri-Weill dyschondrosteosis (LWD), Langer mesomelic dysplasia (LMD), and idiopathic short stature. The loss of X chromosome—Turner syndrome or mosaic 45,X/46,XX or 46,XY—also leads to the heterozygous loss of SHOX in patients with short stature only or with features similar to LWD. The aim of this study was to assess the efficacy of the targeted screening for SHOX variants, which involved different methods in the laboratory analysis of short stature. We determined the significance and positive predictive value of short stature for the detection of SHOX variants. Methods Targeted screening for variants in SHOX involving MLPA, sequencing, karyotyping and FISH was performed in the short stature cohort (N = 174) and control cohort (N = 91). The significance of short stature and particular characteristics for the detection of SHOX variants was determined by Fisher’s exact test, and the probability of SHOX mutation occurrence was calculated using a forward/stepwise logistic regression model. Results In total, 27 and 15 variants influencing SHOX were detected in the short stature and control cohorts, respectively (p > 0.01). Sex chromosome aberrations and pathogenic CNV resulting in diagnosis were detected in eight (4.6%) and five (2.9%) patients of the short stature group and three (3.3%) and one (1.1%) individuals of the control group. VUS variants were discovered in 14 (8.0%) and 11 (12.1%) individuals of the short stature and control groups, respectively. MLPA demonstrated the detection rate of 13.22%, and it can be used as a frontline method for detection of aberrations involving SHOX. However, only mosaicism of monosomy X with a higher frequency of monosomic cells could be reliably discovered by this method. Karyotyping and FISH can compensate for this limitation; their detection rates in short stature group were 3.55% and 13.46% (N = 52), respectively. FISH proved to be more effective than karyotyping in the study as it could reveal cryptic mosaics in some cases where karyotyping initially failed to detect such a clone. We suggest adding FISH on different tissue than peripheral blood to verify sex-chromosome constitution, especially in cases with karyotypes: 45,X; mosaic 45,X/46,XX or 46,XY; 46,Xidic(Y) detected from blood; in children, where mosaic 45,X was detected prenatally but was not confirmed from peripheral blood. The correlation of short stature with the occurrence of SHOX mutations was insignificant and short stature demonstrates a low positive predictive value-15.5% as unique indicator for SHOX mutations. The typical skeletal signs of LWD, including Madelung deformity and disproportionate growth, positively correlate with the findings of pathogenic SHOX variants (p < 0.01) by Fisher’s exact test but not with the findings of VUS variants in SHOX which are more prevalent in the individuals with idiopathic short stature or in the individuals with normal height.https://peerj.com/articles/10236.pdfSHOXShort statureLeri-Weill dyschondrosteosisTurner syndromeScreening for mutationsIdiopathic short stature
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pavlina Capkova
Zuzana Capkova
Peter Rohon
Katerina Adamová
Jirina Zapletalova
spellingShingle Pavlina Capkova
Zuzana Capkova
Peter Rohon
Katerina Adamová
Jirina Zapletalova
Short stature and SHOX (Short stature homeobox) variants—efficacy of screening using various strategies
PeerJ
SHOX
Short stature
Leri-Weill dyschondrosteosis
Turner syndrome
Screening for mutations
Idiopathic short stature
author_facet Pavlina Capkova
Zuzana Capkova
Peter Rohon
Katerina Adamová
Jirina Zapletalova
author_sort Pavlina Capkova
title Short stature and SHOX (Short stature homeobox) variants—efficacy of screening using various strategies
title_short Short stature and SHOX (Short stature homeobox) variants—efficacy of screening using various strategies
title_full Short stature and SHOX (Short stature homeobox) variants—efficacy of screening using various strategies
title_fullStr Short stature and SHOX (Short stature homeobox) variants—efficacy of screening using various strategies
title_full_unstemmed Short stature and SHOX (Short stature homeobox) variants—efficacy of screening using various strategies
title_sort short stature and shox (short stature homeobox) variants—efficacy of screening using various strategies
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Background SHOX mutations have previously been described as causes of Léri-Weill dyschondrosteosis (LWD), Langer mesomelic dysplasia (LMD), and idiopathic short stature. The loss of X chromosome—Turner syndrome or mosaic 45,X/46,XX or 46,XY—also leads to the heterozygous loss of SHOX in patients with short stature only or with features similar to LWD. The aim of this study was to assess the efficacy of the targeted screening for SHOX variants, which involved different methods in the laboratory analysis of short stature. We determined the significance and positive predictive value of short stature for the detection of SHOX variants. Methods Targeted screening for variants in SHOX involving MLPA, sequencing, karyotyping and FISH was performed in the short stature cohort (N = 174) and control cohort (N = 91). The significance of short stature and particular characteristics for the detection of SHOX variants was determined by Fisher’s exact test, and the probability of SHOX mutation occurrence was calculated using a forward/stepwise logistic regression model. Results In total, 27 and 15 variants influencing SHOX were detected in the short stature and control cohorts, respectively (p > 0.01). Sex chromosome aberrations and pathogenic CNV resulting in diagnosis were detected in eight (4.6%) and five (2.9%) patients of the short stature group and three (3.3%) and one (1.1%) individuals of the control group. VUS variants were discovered in 14 (8.0%) and 11 (12.1%) individuals of the short stature and control groups, respectively. MLPA demonstrated the detection rate of 13.22%, and it can be used as a frontline method for detection of aberrations involving SHOX. However, only mosaicism of monosomy X with a higher frequency of monosomic cells could be reliably discovered by this method. Karyotyping and FISH can compensate for this limitation; their detection rates in short stature group were 3.55% and 13.46% (N = 52), respectively. FISH proved to be more effective than karyotyping in the study as it could reveal cryptic mosaics in some cases where karyotyping initially failed to detect such a clone. We suggest adding FISH on different tissue than peripheral blood to verify sex-chromosome constitution, especially in cases with karyotypes: 45,X; mosaic 45,X/46,XX or 46,XY; 46,Xidic(Y) detected from blood; in children, where mosaic 45,X was detected prenatally but was not confirmed from peripheral blood. The correlation of short stature with the occurrence of SHOX mutations was insignificant and short stature demonstrates a low positive predictive value-15.5% as unique indicator for SHOX mutations. The typical skeletal signs of LWD, including Madelung deformity and disproportionate growth, positively correlate with the findings of pathogenic SHOX variants (p < 0.01) by Fisher’s exact test but not with the findings of VUS variants in SHOX which are more prevalent in the individuals with idiopathic short stature or in the individuals with normal height.
topic SHOX
Short stature
Leri-Weill dyschondrosteosis
Turner syndrome
Screening for mutations
Idiopathic short stature
url https://peerj.com/articles/10236.pdf
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