Search results for "SOS1"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Case report: Noonan syndrome with multiple giant cell lesions and review of the literature.

2012

Noonan syndrome with multiple giant cell lesions (NS/MGCL) was recently shown to be a phenotypic variation within the syndromes of the Ras/MAPK pathway and not an independent entity as previously thought. Here we report on a 13-year-old boy with a typical phenotype of NS including atrial septal defect, pulmonic stenosis, short stature, and combined pectus carinatum/excavatum, pronounced MGCL of both jaws, and a de novo mutation in PTPN11, c.236A>G (which predicts p.Q79R). Mutations in PTPN11 are the most frequent cause of NS and p.Q79R is a recurrent mutation in exon 3. Including this patient, 24 patients with molecularly confirmed NS, LEOPARD, or CFC/MGCL syndrome have been reported to dat…

Maleendocrine systemmedicine.medical_specialtyPathologyAdolescentmedicine.disease_causeShort statureGiant CellsInternal medicineMAP2K1GeneticsmedicineHumansGenetics (clinical)Mutationbusiness.industryNoonan Syndromemedicine.diseasePTPN11EndocrinologyGiant cellSOS1Noonan syndromePectus carinatummedicine.symptombusinessAmerican journal of medical genetics. Part A
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Cutis verticis gyrata and Noonan syndrome: report of two cases with pathogenetic variant in SOS1 gene

2022

Abstract Background Noonan and Noonan-like syndromes are multisystem genetic disorders, mainly with autosomal dominant trasmission, caused by mutations in several genes. Missense pathogenetic variants of SOS1 gene are the second most common cause of Noonan syndrome (NS) and account approximately for 13% to 17% of cases. Subjects carrying a pathogenetic variant in SOS1 gene tend to exhibit a distinctive phenotype that is characterized by ectodermal abnormalities. Cutis verticis gyrata (CVG) is a rare disease, congenital or acquired, characterized by the redundancy of skin on scalp, forming thick skin folds and grooves of similar aspect to cerebral cortex gyri. Several references in the liter…

Rare DiseasesScalpCutis verticis gyrataCase reportHumansNoonan syndromeGeneral MedicineSOS1K170EItalian Journal of Pediatrics
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