Article Text

Sulphate transporter gene mutations in apparently isolated club foot
  1. C HUBER*,
  2. S ODENT,
  3. S RUMEUR,
  4. P PADOVANI§,
  5. C PENET*,
  6. V CORMIER-DAIRE*,
  7. A MUNNICH*,
  8. M LE MERRER*
  1. *Department of Genetics and INSERM U-393, Hôpital Necker Enfants Malades, 149 rue de Sèvres, 75743 Paris cedex 15, France
  2. †Service de Pédiatrie Génétique, CHU Pontchaillou, Rennes, France
  3. ‡Centre Helio Marin de Roscoff, Perhardy Roscoff, France
  4. §Service d'Orthopédie Infantile, Hôpital Necker Enfants Malades, Paris, France
  1. Dr Le Merrer, lemerrer{at}necker.fr

Statistics from Altmetric.com

Request Permissions

If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.

Editor—Diastrophic dysplasia was originally ascribed to sulphate transporter gene (DTDST) mutations. TheDTDST gene is now also known to account for a variety of bone dysplasias including diastrophic dysplasia, atelosteogenesis type II (AO2), and achondrogenesis Ib.1-3 Abnormally sulphated cartilage proteoglycans with deficient cartilage sulphate content has been reported in these conditions,4 suggesting that a variable residualDTDST activity probably accounts for the broad spectrum of clinical phenotypes at this locus.5

While a predominant founder mutation in the splice donor site of a previously undescribed 5′ untranslated exon accounts for the disease in Finland, more than 30 mutations have been reported so far world wide6 and compound heterozygosity for variably deleterious mutations probably explains the broad spectrum of clinical phenotypes at the DTDST locus.2 7 8 The R279W mutation is the most common mutation in non-Finnish patients and, apart from its original report in an AO2 patient, compound heterozygosity for this mutation has been consistently associated with a non-lethal phenotype.

Recently, Superti-Furga et al 9 reported homozygosity for the R279W mutation in an adult affected with multiple epiphyseal dysplasia, normal stature, club foot, and double layered patella. Here, we add further support to this view and report on the association of apparently isolated club foot with the homozygous R279W DTDSTmutation in two unrelated sibships of western French ancestry (Brittany).

In family 1, dizygotic twins, a boy …

View Full Text