PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

Expression analysis of macrodactyly identifies pleiotrophin upregulation.

  • Frank H Lau,
  • Fang Xia,
  • Adam Kaplan,
  • Felecia Cerrato,
  • Arin K Greene,
  • Amir Taghinia,
  • Chad A Cowan,
  • Brian I Labow

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040423
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 7
p. e40423

Abstract

Read online

Macrodactyly is a rare family of congenital disorders characterized by the diffuse enlargement of 1 or more digits. Multiple tissue types within the affected digits are involved, but skeletal patterning and gross morphological features are preserved. Not all tissues are equally involved and there is marked heterogeneity with respect to clinical phenotype. The molecular mechanisms responsible for these growth disturbances offer unique insight into normal limb growth and development, in general. To date, no genes or loci have been implicated in the development of macrodactyly. In this study, we performed the first transcriptional profiling of macrodactyly tissue. We found that pleiotrophin (PTN) was significantly overexpressed across all our macrodactyly samples. The mitogenic functions of PTN correlate closely with the clinical characteristics of macrodactyly. PTN thus represents a promising target for further investigation into the etiology of overgrowth phenotypes.