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      FREM1 mutations cause bifid nose, renal agenesis, and anorectal malformations syndrome.

      American Journal of Human Genetics
      Abnormalities, Multiple, genetics, Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Base Sequence, DNA Mutational Analysis, Extracellular Matrix Proteins, chemistry, metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Mice, Molecular Sequence Data, Mutation, Nose, embryology, Syndrome

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          Abstract

          An autosomal-recessive syndrome of bifid nose and anorectal and renal anomalies (BNAR) was previously reported in a consanguineous Egyptian sibship. Here, we report the results of linkage analysis, on this family and on two other families with a similar phenotype, which identified a shared region of homozygosity on chromosome 9p22.2-p23. Candidate-gene analysis revealed homozygous frameshift and missense mutations in FREM1, which encodes an extracellular matrix component of basement membranes. In situ hybridization experiments demonstrated gene expression of Frem1 in the midline of E11.5 mouse embryos, in agreement with the observed cleft nose phenotype of our patients. FREM1 is part of a ternary complex that includes FRAS1 and FREM2, and mutations of the latter two genes have been reported to cause Fraser syndrome in mice and humans. The phenotypic variability previously reported for different Frem1 mouse mutants suggests that the apparently distinct phenotype of BNAR in humans may represent a previously unrecognized variant of Fraser syndrome.

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