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Barber–Say syndrome
Barber Say syndrome | |
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Other names | Hypertrichosis-atrophic skin-ectropion-macrostomia syndrome |
Barber-Say syndrome has an autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance | |
Usual onset | Neonatal |
Barber-Say syndrome (BSS) is a very rare congenital disorder associated with excessive hair growth (hypertrichosis), fragile (atrophic) skin, eyelid deformities (ectropion), and an overly broad mouth (macrostomia).
Barber-Say syndrome is phenotypically similar to Ablepharon macrostomia syndrome, which is also associated with dominant mutations in TWIST2.
Signs and symptoms
- Severe hypertrichosis, especially of the back
- Skin abnormalities, including hyperlaxity and redundancy
- Facial dysmorphism, including macrostomia
- Eyelid deformities, in
- Abnormal and low-set ears
- Bulbous nasal tip with hypoplastic alae nasi
- Low frontal hairline
Genetics
Multiple cases of parent-to-child transmission suggest that Barber-Say syndrome exhibits autosomal dominant inheritance. Exome sequencing and expression studies have shown that BSS is caused by mutations in the TWIST2 gene that affect a highly conserved residue of TWIST2 (twist-related protein 2). TWIST2 is a basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor that binds to E-box DNA motifs (5'-CANNTG-3') as a heterodimer and inhibits transcriptional activation. Because TWIST2 mediates mesenchymal stem cell differentiation and prevents premature or ectopic osteoblast differentiation, mutations in TWIST2 that disrupt these functions by altering DNA-binding activity could explain many of the phenotypes of BSS.
Diagnosis
Epidemiology
The prevalence of Barber Say syndrome is less than 1 in 1,000,000. As of 2017, only 15 cases have been reported in the literature.
External links
Classification | |
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External resources |
Congenital abnormality syndromes
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Craniofacial | |
Short stature | |
Limbs | |
Overgrowth syndromes | |
Laurence–Moon–Bardet–Biedl | |
Combined/other, known locus |