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Molecular Diversity and Associated Phenotypic Spectrum of Germline CBL Mutations
ISSN
1098-1004
1059-7794
Date Issued
2015
Author(s)
Martinelli, Simone
Stellacci, Emilia
Pannone, Luca
D'Agostino, Daniela
Consoli, Federica
Lissewski, Christina
Silvano, Marianna
Cencelli, Giulia
Lepri, Francesca
Maitz, Silvia
Rauch, Anita
Zampino, Giuseppe
Selicorni, Angelo
Melancon, Serge
Digilio, Maria C.
Gelb, Bruce D.
De Luca, Alessandro
Dallapiccola, Bruno
Zenker, Martin
Tartaglia, Marco
DOI
10.1002/humu.22809
Abstract
Noonan syndrome (NS) is a relatively common developmental disorder with a pleomorphic phenotype. Mutations causing NS alter genes encoding proteins involved in the RAS-MAPK pathway. We and others identified Casitas B-lineage lymphoma proto-oncogene (CBL), which encodes an E3-ubiquitin ligase acting as a tumor suppressor in myeloid malignancies, as a disease gene underlying a condition clinically related to NS. Here, we further explored the spectrum of germline CBL mutations and their associated phenotype. CBL mutation scanning performed on 349 affected subjects with features overlapping NS and no mutation in NS genes allowed the identification of five different variants with pathological significance. Among them, two splice-site changes, one in-frame deletion, and one missense mutation affected the RING domain and/or the adjacent linker region, overlapping cancer-associated defects. A novel nonsense mutation generating a v-Cbl-like protein able to enhance signal flow through RAS was also identified. Genotype-phenotype correlation analysis performed on available records indicated that germline CBL mutations cause a variable phenotype characterized by a relatively high frequency of neurological features, predisposition to juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia, and low prevalence of cardiac defects, reduced growth, and cryptorchidism. Finally, we excluded a major contribution of two additional members of the CBL family, CBLB and CBLC, to NS and related disorders.