Mutations in interferon regulatory factor 6 (IRF6) account for ∼70% of cases of Van der Woude syndrome (VWS), the most common syndromic form of cleft lip and palate. In 8 of 45 VWS-affected families lacking a mutation in IRF6, we found coding mutations in grainyhead-like 3 (GRHL3). According to a zebrafish-based assay, the disease-associated GRHL3 mutations abrogated periderm development and were consistent with a dominant-negative effect, in contrast to haploinsufficiency seen in most VWS cases caused by IRF6 mutations. In mouse, all embryos lacking Grhl3 exhibited abnormal oral periderm and 17% developed a cleft palate. Analysis of the oral phenotype of double heterozygote (Irf6(+/-);Grhl3(+/-)) murine embryos failed to detect epistasis between the two genes, suggesting that they function in separate but convergent pathways during palatogenesis. Taken together, our data demonstrated that mutations in two genes, IRF6 and GRHL3, can lead to nearly identical phenotypes of orofacial cleft. They supported the hypotheses that both genes are essential for the presence of a functional oral periderm and that failure of this process contributes to VWS.
We investigated the prevalence of mutations in the PHD finger protein 8 (PHF8) gene in X‐linked mental retardation (XLMR) and facial cleft starting from the original cohort of 7712 patients operated on since1 January 1950 for cleft lip/cleft palate in the Cleft Centre at the Helsinki University Hospital. From this nationwide material, 18 patients including one family with two male patients with cleft lip/cleft palate and unknown cause of mental retardation (MR) were sequenced for the coding regions and splice sites of the PHF8 gene. A novel missense mutation c.836C>T of the PHF8 gene was identified in a Finnish family with multiple‐affected male patients. The mutation resides in exon 8 and changes phenylalanine to serine (F279S) in the functionally important Jmonji C domain of the protein. The clinical phenotype of the male patients was characterized by mild MR, mild dysmorphic features, unilateral cleft lip and cleft palate in one and bilateral cleft lip and cleft palate in the other sibling. The mutation was not present in 200 anonymous blood donors (approximately 300 X‐chromosomes). To our knowledge, F279S is the third mutation of the PHF8 gene identified so far.
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