Genes (Feb 2024)

Relevance of Extending FGFR3 Gene Analysis in Osteochondrodysplasia to Non-Coding Sequences: A Case Report

  • Zangbéwendé Guy Ouedraogo,
  • Caroline Janel,
  • Alexandre Janin,
  • Gilles Millat,
  • Sarah Langlais,
  • Bénédicte Pontier,
  • Marie Biard,
  • Mathis Lepage,
  • Christine Francannet,
  • Fanny Laffargue,
  • Isabelle Creveaux

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/genes15020225
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 2
p. 225

Abstract

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Skeletal dysplasia, also called osteochondrodysplasia, is a category of disorders affecting bone development and children’s growth. Up to 552 genes, including fibroblast growth factor receptor 3 (FGFR3), have been implicated by pathogenic variations in its genesis. Frequently identified causal mutations in osteochondrodysplasia arise in the coding sequences of the FGFR3 gene: c.1138G>A and c.1138G>C in achondroplasia and c.1620C>A and c.1620C>G in hypochondroplasia. However, in some cases, the diagnostic investigations undertaken thus far have failed to identify the causal anomaly, which strengthens the relevance of the diagnostic strategies being further refined. We observed a Caucasian adult with clinical and radiographic features of achondroplasia, with no common pathogenic variant. Exome sequencing detected an FGFR3(NM_000142.4):c.1075+95C>G heterozygous intronic variation. In vitro studies showed that this variant results in the aberrant exonization of a 90-nucleotide 5′ segment of intron 8, resulting in the substitution of the alanine (Ala359) for a glycine (Gly) and the in-frame insertion of 30 amino acids. This change may alter FGFR3’s function. Our report provides the first clinical description of an adult carrying this variant, which completes the phenotype description previously provided in children and confirms the recurrence, the autosomal-dominant pathogenicity, and the diagnostic relevance of this FGFR3 intronic variant. We support its inclusion in routinely used diagnostic tests for osteochondrodysplasia. This may increase the detection rate of causal variants and therefore could have a positive impact on patient management. Finally, FGFR3 alteration via non-coding sequence exonization should be considered a recurrent disease mechanism to be taken into account for new drug design and clinical trial strategies.

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