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条目 - *613113 - NEUROFIBROMIN 1; NF1 - OMIM

* 613113

NEUROFIBROMIN 1; NF1
神经纤维瘤蛋白 1; nf1


Alternative titles; symbols
替代名称;符号

NEUROFIBROMIN   神经纤维素


HGNC Approved Gene Symbol: NF1
HGNC 批准的基因符号:NF1

Cytogenetic location: 17q11.2   Genomic coordinates (GRCh38) : 17:31,094,927-31,377,677 (from NCBI)
细胞遗传位置:17q11.2 基因组坐标(GRCh38):17:31,094,927-31,377,677(来自 NCBI)


Gene-Phenotype Relationships
基因与表型的关系
Location   地点 Phenotype   表型 Phenotype   表型
MIM number   MIM 编号
Inheritance   继承 Phenotype   表型
mapping key   映射键
17q11.2 Leukemia, juvenile myelomonocytic
白血病,幼年髓单核细胞型
607785 AD, SMu 3
Neurofibromatosis-Noonan syndrome
神经纤维瘤病-努南综合征
601321 AD 3
Neurofibromatosis, familial spinal
家族性脊髓神经纤维瘤病
162210 AD 3
Neurofibromatosis, type 1
神经纤维瘤病,1 型
162200 AD 3
Watson syndrome   沃森综合征 193520 AD 3

TEXT  文本

Description   ▼ 说明

The NF1 gene encodes neurofibromin, a cytoplasmic protein that is predominantly expressed in neurons, Schwann cells, oligodendrocytes, and leukocytes. It is a multidomain molecule with the capacity to regulate several intracellular processes, including the RAS (see 190020)-cyclic AMP pathway, the ERK (600997)/MAP (see 600178) kinase cascade, adenylyl cyclase, and cytoskeletal assembly (summary by Trovo-Marqui and Tajara, 2006).
NF1 基因编码神经纤维色素,这是一种主要在神经元、许旺细胞、少突胶质细胞和白细胞中表达的细胞质蛋白。它是一种多域分子,具有调节多种细胞内过程的能力,包括 RAS(见 190020)-环 AMP 途径、ERK(600997)/MAP(见 600178)激酶级联、腺苷酸环化酶和细胞骨架组装(Trovo-Marqui 和 Tajara 的摘要,2006 年)。


Cloning and Expression
▼ 克隆和表达

Buchberg et al. (1990) sequenced a portion of the murine NF1 gene and showed that the predicted amino acid sequence is nearly the same as the corresponding region of the human NF1 gene product. Computer searches identified homology between the mouse NF1 gene and the Ira1 and Ira2 genes identified in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which negatively regulate the RAS-cyclic AMP pathway. RAS proteins are involved in the control of proliferation and differentiation in mammalian cells. Their activity is modulated by their ability to bind and hydrolyze guanine nucleotides. GTP-binding activates RAS, whereas GTP hydrolysis inactivates RAS. Mutant forms of RAS found in human tumors have greatly decreased GTPase activity, resulting in accumulation of RAS in the GTP-bound active form.
Buchberg 等人(1990 年)对小鼠 NF1 基因的一部分进行了测序,结果表明预测的氨基酸序列与人类 NF1 基因产物的相应区域几乎相同。通过计算机搜索发现,小鼠 NF1 基因与在酿酒酵母中发现的 Ira1 和 Ira2 基因存在同源性。RAS 蛋白参与控制哺乳动物细胞的增殖和分化。它们的活性受其结合和水解鸟嘌呤核苷酸能力的调节。GTP 结合可激活 RAS,而 GTP 水解可使 RAS 失活。在人类肿瘤中发现的 RAS 突变体大大降低了 GTP 酶的活性,导致 RAS 以 GTP 结合的活性形式积聚。

Xu et al. (1990) extended the known open reading frame of the human NF1 gene by cDNA walking and sequencing. The new sequence predicted 2,485 amino acids of the NF1 peptide. A 360-residue region showed significant similarity to the catalytic domains of both human and bovine GTPase-activating protein (GAP, or RASA1; 139150). Xu et al. (1990) suggested that NF1 encodes a cytoplasmic GAP-like protein that may be involved in the control of cell growth by interacting with proteins such as the RAS gene product.
Xu 等人(1990 年)通过 cDNA 走查和测序扩展了已知的人类 NF1 基因开放阅读框。新序列预测出了 2,485 个氨基酸的 NF1 肽。一个 360 个氨基酸的区域与人和牛的 GTPase-activating protein(GAP,或 RASA1;139150)的催化结构域非常相似。Xu 等人(1990 年)认为,NF1 编码的细胞质 GAP 样蛋白可能通过与 RAS 基因产物等蛋白相互作用而参与细胞生长的控制。

Marchuk et al. (1991) reported an extensive cDNA walk resulting in the cloning of the complete coding region of the NF1 transcript. Analysis of the sequences revealed an open reading frame of 2,818 amino acids, although alternatively spliced products may code for different protein isoforms.
Marchuk 等人(1991 年)报告了一项广泛的 cDNA 研究,结果克隆出了 NF1 转录本的完整编码区。对该序列的分析表明,其开放阅读框包含 2,818 个氨基酸,但其替代剪接产物可能编码不同的蛋白质异构体。

To study the NF1 gene product, Gutmann et al. (1991) raised antibodies against both fusion proteins and synthetic peptides. A specific protein of about 250 kD was identified by both immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting. The protein was found in all tissues and cell lines examined and was detected in human, rat, and mouse tissues. Based on the homology between the NF1 gene product and members of the GAP superfamily, the name NF1-GAP-related protein (NF1-GRD) was suggested. DeClue et al. (1991) raised rabbit antisera to a bacterially synthesized peptide corresponding to the GAP-related domain of NF1 (NF1-GRD). The sera specifically detected a 280-kD protein in lysates of HeLa cells. This protein corresponded to the NF1 gene product, as shown by several criteria. NF1 was present in a large molecular mass complex in fibroblast and schwannoma cell lines and appeared to associate with a very large (400-500 kD) protein in both cell lines.
为了研究 NF1 基因产物,Gutmann 等人(1991 年)提出了针对融合蛋白和合成肽的抗体。通过免疫沉淀和免疫印迹法,确定了一种约 250 kD 的特异性蛋白质。在所有受检组织和细胞系中都发现了这种蛋白质,在人、大鼠和小鼠组织中也检测到了这种蛋白质。根据 NF1 基因产物与 GAP 超家族成员之间的同源性,将其命名为 NF1-GAP 相关蛋白(NF1-GRD)。DeClue 等人(1991 年)针对与 NF1 的 GAP 相关结构域(NF1-GRD)相对应的细菌合成肽提出了兔抗血清。血清在 HeLa 细胞裂解液中特异性地检测到 280 kD 的蛋白质。根据多项标准,该蛋白与 NF1 基因产物相对应。NF1 在成纤维细胞和精神分裂瘤细胞系中以大分子量复合物的形式存在,在这两种细胞系中似乎都与一种非常大(400-500 kD)的蛋白质结合在一起。

Daston et al. (1992) raised antibodies against peptides coded by portions of the NF1 cDNA. These antibodies specifically recognized a 220-kD protein, called neurofibromin, in both human and rat spinal cord. Neurofibromin was most abundant in the nervous system. Immunostaining of tissue sections indicated that neurons, oligodendrocytes, and nonmyelinating Schwann cells contained neurofibromin, whereas astrocytes and myelinating Schwann cells did not.
Daston 等人(1992 年)针对 NF1 cDNA 部分编码的肽提出了抗体。这些抗体能在人和大鼠的脊髓中特异性地识别一种 220 kD 的蛋白质,即神经纤维瘤蛋白。神经纤维瘤蛋白在神经系统中含量最高。组织切片的免疫染色表明,神经元、少突胶质细胞和非髓鞘化的许旺细胞含有神经纤维瘤蛋白,而星形胶质细胞和髓鞘化的许旺细胞则没有。

Trovo-Marqui and Tajara (2006) stated that 4 splicing exons (9a, 10a-2, 23a, and 48a) are responsible for the production of 5 human neurofibromin isoforms (II, 3, 4, 9a, and 10a-2), which exhibit differential expression in distinct tissues. Neurofibromin II, named GRD2 (domain II-related GAP), is the result of the insertion of exon 23a, is expressed in Schwann cells, and has a reduced capacity of acting as GAP. Neurofibromins 3 and 4, which contain exon 48a and both exons 23a and 48a, respectively, are expressed in muscle tissue, mainly in cardiac and skeleton muscles. Neurofibromin 9a (also called 9br) is the result of the inclusion of exon 9a and shows limited neuronal expression. Isoform 10a-2 is the result of insertion of exon 10a-2, which introduces a transmembrane domain. This isoform has been observed in the majority of human tissues analyzed.
Trovo-Marqui 和 Tajara(2006 年)指出,4 个剪接外显子(9a、10a-2、23a 和 48a)负责产生 5 种人类神经纤维瘤蛋白异构体(II、3、4、9a 和 10a-2),这些异构体在不同的组织中表现出不同的表达方式。神经纤维色素 II 被命名为 GRD2(与结构域 II 相关的 GAP),是外显子 23a 插入的结果,在许旺细胞中表达,其作为 GAP 的能力较弱。神经纤维瘤蛋白 3 和 4 分别含有外显子 48a 以及 23a 和 48a 两个外显子,在肌肉组织中表达,主要在心肌和骨骼肌中表达。神经纤维瘤蛋白 9a(又称 9br)是包含外显子 9a 的结果,在神经元中的表达有限。同工酶 10a-2 是外显子 10a-2 插入的结果,它引入了一个跨膜结构域。在分析的大多数人体组织中都发现了这种异构体。


Gene Structure   ▼ 基因结构

Xu et al. (1990) found that 3 active genes, called OMGP (164345), EVI2B (158381), and EVI2A (158380), lie within an intron of NF1 but in opposite orientation.
Xu 等人(1990 年)发现,3 个名为 OMGP(164345)、EVI2B(158381)和 EVI2A(158380)的活性基因位于 NF1 的一个内含子中,但方向相反。

Xu et al. (1992) found a pseudogene of the AK3L1 gene (103030) in an intron of the NF1 gene. It appeared to be a processed pseudogene since it lacked introns and contained a polyadenylate tract; it nevertheless retained coding potential because the open reading frame was not impaired by any observed base substitutions.
Xu 等人(1992 年)在 NF1 基因的一个内含子中发现了 AK3L1 基因的假基因(103030)。它似乎是一个经过加工的假基因,因为它缺乏内含子并含有一个多聚腺苷酸束;但它仍具有编码潜力,因为开放阅读框没有受到任何观察到的碱基替换的损害。

Heim et al. (1994) cited evidence that the NF1 gene spans approximately 350 kb of genomic DNA, encodes an mRNA of 11 to 13 kb, and contains at least 56 exons.
Heim 等人(1994 年)引用的证据表明,NF1 基因横跨约 350 kb 的基因组 DNA,编码 11 至 13 kb 的 mRNA,至少包含 56 个外显子。

Li et al. (1995) showed that the 5-prime end of the NF1 gene is embedded in a CpG island containing a NotI restriction site and that the remainder of the gene lies in the adjacent 35-kb NotI fragment. In their efforts to develop a comprehensive screen for NF1 mutations, they isolated genomic DNA clones that together contain the entire NF1 cDNA sequence. They identified all intron-exon boundaries of the coding region and established that it contains at least 59 exons. The 3-prime untranslated region of the NF1 gene was found to span approximately 3.5 kb and to be continuous with the stop codon.
Li 等人(1995 年)的研究表明,NF1 基因的 5-prime 端位于一个含有 NotI 限制位点的 CpG 岛中,基因的其余部分位于相邻的 35-kb NotI 片段中。为了对 NF1 基因突变进行全面筛查,他们分离出了包含整个 NF1 cDNA 序列的基因组 DNA 克隆。他们确定了编码区的所有内含子-外显子边界,并确定该编码区至少包含 59 个外显子。研究发现,NF1 基因的 3-prime 非翻译区跨度约为 3.5 kb,并与终止密码子连续。

Trovo-Marqui and Tajara (2006) stated that the NF1 gene contains 61 exons.
Trovo-Marqui 和 Tajara(2006 年)指出,NF1 基因包含 61 个外显子。


Mapping   ▼ 制图

Barker et al. (1987) demonstrated that the gene responsible for neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200) is located in the pericentromeric region of chromosome 17.
Barker 等人(1987 年)证实,导致 I 型神经纤维瘤病(NF1;162200)的基因位于 17 号染色体的近着丝粒区。

Wallace et al. (1990) identified a large transcript from the candidate NF1 region on chromosome 17q11.2 that was disrupted in 3 patients with neurofibromatosis type I. The changes disrupted expression of the NF1 transcript in all 3 patients, consistent with the hypothesis that it acts as a tumor suppressor.
Wallace 等人(1990 年)从染色体 17q11.2 上的候选 NF1 区域发现了一个大的转录本,该转录本在 3 名 I 型神经纤维瘤病患者中被中断。

Pseudogenes  假基因

Legius et al. (1992) characterized an NF1-related locus on chromosome 15. The nonprocessed NF1 pseudogene (NF1P1) can produce additional fragments in Southern blotting, pulsed field gel, and PCR experiments with some NF1 cDNA probes or oligonucleotides. In addition, certain regions of the NF1 gene cross-hybridize with a locus on chromosome 14. These loci can cause confusion in the mutation analysis of patients with NF1.
Legius 等人(1992 年)鉴定了 15 号染色体上与 NF1 相关的基因座。在使用某些 NF1 cDNA 探针或寡核苷酸进行 Southern 印迹、脉冲场凝胶和 PCR 实验时,未加工的 NF1 假基因(NF1P1)会产生额外的片段。此外,NF1 基因的某些区域会与 14 号染色体上的一个基因座发生交叉杂交。在对 NF1 患者进行突变分析时,这些位点可能会造成混淆。

Numerous NF1 pseudogenes have been identified in the human genome. Those in 2q21, 14q11, and 22q11 form a subset with a similar genomic organization and a high sequence homology. By PCR and fluorescence in situ hybridization, Luijten et al. (2001) studied the extent of the homology of the regions surrounding these NF1 pseudogenes. They found that a fragment of at least 640 kb is homologous between the 3 regions. Based on previous studies and these new findings, they proposed a model for the spreading of the NF1 pseudogene-containing regions. A fragment of approximately 640 kb was first duplicated in chromosome region 2q21 and transposed to 14q11. Subsequently, this fragment was duplicated in 14q11 and transposed to 22q11. A part of the 640-kb fragment in 14q11, with a length of about 430 kb, was further duplicated to a variable extent in 14q11. In addition, Luijten et al. (2001) identified sequences that may facilitate the duplication and transposition of the 640-kb and 430-kb fragments.
在人类基因组中发现了许多 NF1 假基因。位于 2q21、14q11 和 22q11 的假基因形成了一个子集,具有相似的基因组结构和高度的序列同源性。通过 PCR 和荧光原位杂交,Luijten 等人(2001 年)研究了这些 NF1 伪基因周围区域的同源性程度。他们发现,这 3 个区域之间至少有 640 kb 的片段是同源的。根据以前的研究和这些新发现,他们提出了一个含 NF1 伪基因区域的扩散模型。一个约 640 kb 的片段首先在 2q21 染色体区复制并转位到 14q11。 随后,该片段在 14q11 复制并转位到 22q11。 14q11 中 640 kb 片段的一部分长度约为 430 kb,在 14q11 中又有不同程度的复制。 此外,Luijten 等人(2001 年)还发现了可能促进 640 kb 和 430 kb 片段复制和转位的序列。


Gene Function   ▼ 基因功能

DeClue et al. (1992) presented evidence implicating the NF1 protein as a tumor suppressor gene product that negatively regulates p21(ras) (see 190020) and defined a 'positive' growth role for RAS activity in NF1 malignancies.
DeClue 等人(1992 年)提出的证据表明,NF1 蛋白是一种肿瘤抑制基因产物,对 p21(ras)(见 190020)具有负调节作用,并定义了 RAS 活性在 NF1 恶性肿瘤中的 "积极 "生长作用。

Basu et al. (1992) presented evidence supporting the hypothesis that NF1 is a tumor-suppressor gene whose product acts upstream of the RAS proteins. They showed that the RAS proteins in malignant tumor cell lines from patients with NF1 were in a constitutively activated state as measured by the ratio of the guanine nucleotides bound to them, i.e., the ratio of GTP (active) to GDP (inactive). Transforming mutants of p21(ras) bind large amounts of GTP, whereas wildtype p21(ras) is almost entirely GDP-bound.
Basu 等人(1992 年)提出的证据支持 NF1 是一种肿瘤抑制基因的假设,其产物作用于 RAS 蛋白的上游。他们发现,NF1 患者恶性肿瘤细胞系中的 RAS 蛋白处于持续活化状态,这是通过与之结合的鸟嘌呤核苷酸的比率(即 GTP(活性)与 GDP(非活性)的比率)来衡量的。p21(ras) 的转化突变体与大量 GTP 结合,而野生型 p21(ras) 则几乎完全与 GDP 结合。

Nakafuku et al. (1993) took advantage of the yeast RAS system to isolate mutants in the RAS GTPase activating protein-related domain of the NF1 gene product (NF1-GRD) that can act as antioncogenes specific for oncogenic RAS. They demonstrated that these mutant NF1-GRDs, when expressed in mammalian cells, were able to induce morphologic reversion of RAS-transformed NIH 3T3 cells.
Nakafuku 等人(1993 年)利用酵母 RAS 系统分离出了 NF1 基因产物(NF1-GRD)的 RAS GTPase 激活蛋白相关结构域中的突变体,这些突变体可作为致癌 RAS 的特异性抗原。他们证明,这些突变的 NF1-GRD 在哺乳动物细胞中表达时,能够诱导 RAS 转化的 NIH 3T3 细胞发生形态逆转。

Johnson et al. (1993) stated that in schwannoma cell lines from patients with neurofibromatosis, loss of neurofibromin is associated with impaired regulation of GTP/RAS. They analyzed other neural crest-derived tumor cell lines and showed that some melanoma and neuroblastoma cell lines established from tumors occurring in patients without neurofibromatosis also contained reduced or undetectable levels of neurofibromin, with concomitant genetic abnormalities of the NF1 locus. In contrast to the schwannoma cell lines, however, GTP/RAS was appropriately regulated in the melanoma and neuroblastoma lines that were deficient in neurofibromin, even when HRAS (190020) was overexpressed. These results demonstrated that some neural crest tumors not associated with neurofibromatosis have acquired somatically inactivated NF1 genes and suggested a tumor-suppressor function for neurofibromin that is independent of RAS GTPase activation.
Johnson 等人(1993 年)指出,在神经纤维瘤病患者的分裂瘤细胞系中,神经纤维瘤蛋白的缺失与 GTP/RAS 的调节功能受损有关。他们分析了其他来源于神经嵴的肿瘤细胞系,结果表明,从无神经纤维瘤病患者的肿瘤中建立的一些黑色素瘤和神经母细胞瘤细胞系中,神经纤维瘤蛋白的含量也有所降低或检测不到,同时还伴有 NF1 基因座的遗传异常。然而,与分裂瘤细胞系不同的是,在缺乏神经纤维瘤蛋白的黑色素瘤和神经母细胞瘤细胞系中,即使 HRAS ( 190020) 过表达,GTP/RAS 也能得到适当的调节。这些结果表明,一些与神经纤维瘤病无关的神经嵴肿瘤获得了体细胞失活的NF1基因,并表明神经纤维瘤蛋白具有独立于RAS GTP酶激活的肿瘤抑制功能。

Silva et al. (1997) cited several studies that suggested a role of neurofibromin in brain function. The expression of the NF1 gene is largely restricted to neuronal tissues in the adult. This GTPase-activating protein may act as a negative regulator of neurotrophin (see BDNF; 113505)-mediated signaling. They also noted immunohistochemical studies that suggested that activation of astrocytes may be common in the brain of NF1 patients.
Silva 等人(1997 年)引用了几项研究,这些研究表明神经纤维瘤蛋白在大脑功能中发挥作用。NF1 基因的表达主要局限于成人的神经元组织。这种 GTP 酶激活蛋白可能是神经营养素(见 BDNF;113505)介导的信号传导的负调节因子。他们还注意到免疫组化研究表明,NF1 患者大脑中星形胶质细胞的活化可能很常见。

In a review of the molecular neurobiology of human cognition, Weeber and Sweatt (2002) presented an overview of the RAS-ERK-CREB pathway, including the function of NF1. The authors discussed publications that implicated dysfunction of this signal transduction cascade in cognitive defects, including mental retardation caused by mutation in the NF1 gene.
在一篇关于人类认知分子神经生物学的综述中,Weeber 和 Sweatt(2002 年)概述了 RAS-ERK-CREB 通路,包括 NF1 的功能。作者讨论了有关这一信号转导级联功能障碍与认知缺陷(包括 NF1 基因突变导致的智力迟钝)有关的出版物。

Vogel et al. (1995) used a targeted disruption of the NF1 gene in mice to examine the role of neurofibromin in the acquisition of neurotrophin dependence in embryonic neurons. They showed that both neural crest- and placode-derived sensory neurons isolated from NF1 -/- embryos develop, extend neurites, and survive in the absence of neurotrophins, whereas their wildtype counterparts die rapidly unless nerve growth factor (162030) or BDNF is added to the culture medium. Moreover, NF1 -/- sympathetic neurons survive for extended periods and acquire mature morphology in the presence of NGF-blocking antibodies. These results were considered by Vogel et al. (1995) as consistent with a model wherein neurofibromin acts as a negative regulator of neurotrophin-mediated signaling for survival of embryonic peripheral neurons.
Vogel 等人(1995 年)利用对小鼠 NF1 基因的定向干扰,研究了神经纤维蛋白在胚胎神经元获得神经营养素依赖性中的作用。他们发现,从 NF1 -/-胚胎中分离出来的神经嵴和胎座源性感觉神经元都能在没有神经营养素的情况下发育、延伸神经元并存活,而野生型神经元则会迅速死亡,除非在培养基中加入神经生长因子(162030)或 BDNF。此外,NF1 -/-交感神经元在 NGF 阻断抗体的存在下可存活较长时间并获得成熟形态。Vogel 等人(1995 年)认为这些结果与神经纤维瘤蛋白作为神经营养素介导的信号转导的负调控因子促进胚胎外周神经元存活的模型相一致。

For the most part the NF1 tumor suppressor acts through the interaction of its GRD with the product of the RAS protooncogene. Skuse et al. (1996) discovered an mRNA editing site within the NF1 mRNA. Editing at this site changes a cytidine at nucleotide 2914 to a uridine, creating an in-frame translation stop codon. The edited transcript, if translated, would produce a protein truncated in the N-terminal region of the GRD, thereby inactivating the NF1 tumor-suppressor function. Analysis of RNA from a variety of cell lines, tumors, and peripheral blood cells revealed that the NF1 mRNA undergoes editing, to different extents, in every cell type studied. Three tumors analyzed as part of their study, an astrocytoma, a neurofibroma, and a neurofibrosarcoma, each had levels of NF1 mRNA editing substantially higher than did peripheral blood leukocytes. To investigate the role played by editing in NF1 tumorigenesis, Cappione et al. (1997) analyzed RNA from 19 NF1 and 4 non-NF1 tumors. (The authors referred to the editing site as nucleotide 3916.) They observed varying levels in NF1 mRNA editing in different tumors, with a higher range of editing in more malignant tumors (e.g., neurofibrosarcomas) compared to benign tumors (cutaneous neurofibromas). Plexiform neurofibromas had an intermediate range of levels of NF1 mRNA editing. The constitutional levels of NF1 mRNA editing varied slightly in NF1 individuals but were consistent with the levels observed in non-NF1 individuals. In every case, there was a greater level of NF1 mRNA editing in the tumor than in the nontumor tissue from the same patient. These results suggested to Cappione et al. (1997) that inappropriately high levels of NF1 mRNA editing indeed plays a role in NF1 tumorigenesis and that editing may result in the functional equivalent of biallelic inactivation of the NF1 tumor suppressor.
在大多数情况下,NF1 肿瘤抑制因子通过其 GRD 与 RAS 原癌基因产物的相互作用发挥作用。Skuse 等人(1996 年)在 NF1 mRNA 中发现了一个 mRNA 编辑位点。该编辑位点将核苷酸 2914 中的胞苷变为尿苷,从而产生了一个框架内翻译终止密码子。编辑后的转录本如果被翻译,就会产生GRD N端截短的蛋白质,从而使NF1的肿瘤抑制功能失活。对来自各种细胞系、肿瘤和外周血细胞的 RNA 进行分析后发现,在研究的每种细胞类型中,NF1 mRNA 都发生了不同程度的编辑。他们在研究中分析了三种肿瘤,即星形细胞瘤、神经纤维瘤和神经纤维肉瘤,每种肿瘤的 NF1 mRNA 编辑水平都大大高于外周血白细胞。为了研究编辑在 NF1 肿瘤发生中所起的作用,Cappione 等人(1997 年)分析了来自 19 个 NF1 和 4 个非 NF1 肿瘤的 RNA。(作者将编辑位点称为核苷酸 3916。)他们观察到不同肿瘤的 NF1 mRNA 编辑水平不同,与良性肿瘤(皮肤神经纤维瘤)相比,恶性肿瘤(如神经纤维肉瘤)的编辑范围更大。丛状神经纤维瘤的 NF1 mRNA 编辑水平处于中等水平。NF1 患者的 NF1 mRNA 编辑水平略有不同,但与非 NF1 患者的水平一致。在每种情况下,肿瘤中的 NF1 mRNA 编辑水平都高于同一患者的非肿瘤组织。这些结果表明,Cappione 等人的研究发现,肿瘤中的 NF1 mRNA 编辑水平高于非 NF1 患者。 (1997)认为,不适当的高水平 NF1 mRNA 编辑确实在 NF1 肿瘤发生中起了作用,而且编辑可能导致 NF1 肿瘤抑制因子的功能等同于双拷贝失活。

Mukhopadhyay et al. (2002) studied C-to-U RNA editing in peripheral nerve sheath tumor samples (PNSTs) from 34 patients with NF1. Whereas most showed low levels of RNA editing, 8 of the 34 tumors demonstrated 3 to 12% C-to-U editing of NF1 RNA. These tumors demonstrated 2 distinguishing characteristics. First, these PNSTs expressed APOBEC1 (600130) mRNA, the catalytic deaminase of the holoenzyme that edits APOB (107730) RNA. Second, NF1 RNA from these PNSTs contained increased proportions of an alternatively spliced exon, 23A, downstream of the edited base in which editing occurs preferentially. These findings, together with results of both in vivo and in vitro experiments with APOBEC1, strongly suggested an important mechanistic linkage between NF1 RNA splicing and C-to-U editing and provided a basis for understanding the heterogeneity of posttranscriptional regulation of NF1 expression.
Mukhopadhyay 等人(2002 年)研究了 34 名 NF1 患者的周围神经鞘瘤(PNST)样本中的 C 对 U RNA 编辑。虽然大多数肿瘤显示出低水平的 RNA 编辑,但 34 例肿瘤中有 8 例显示出 3% 至 12% 的 NF1 RNA C 对 U 编辑。这些肿瘤有两个显著特点。首先,这些 PNST 表达 APOBEC1 ( 600130) mRNA,这是编辑 APOB ( 107730) RNA 的全酶的催化脱氨酶。其次,来自这些 PNST 的 NF1 RNA 含有更多的交替剪接外显子 23A,该外显子位于编辑碱基的下游,编辑优先发生在该外显子上。这些发现与 APOBEC1 的体内和体外实验结果一起,有力地表明了 NF1 RNA 剪接与 C 到 U 编辑之间的重要机制联系,并为理解 NF1 表达的转录后调控的异质性提供了基础。

The NF1 tumor suppressor protein is thought to restrict cell proliferation by functioning as a Ras-specific guanosine triphosphatase-activating protein. However, The et al. (1997) found that Drosophila homozygous for null mutations of an NF1 homolog show no obvious signs of perturbed RAS1-mediated signaling. Loss of NF1 resulted in a reduction in size of larvae, pupae, and adults. This size defect was not modified by manipulating RAS1 signaling but was restored by expression of activated adenosine 3-prime, 5-prime-monophosphate -dependent protein kinase (PKA; see 176911). Thus, NF1 and PKA appear to interact in a pathway that controls the overall growth of Drosophila. Guo et al. (1997) showed, from a study of Drosophila NF1 mutants, that NF1 is essential for the cellular response to the neuropeptide PACAP38 (pituitary adenylyl cyclase-adenosine activating polypeptide) at the neuromuscular junction. The peptide induced a 3-prime, 5-prime-monophosphate (cAMP) pathway. This response was eliminated in NF1 mutants. NF1 appeared to regulate the rutabaga-encoded adenylyl cyclase rather than the RAS-RAF pathway. Moreover, the NF1 defect was rescued by the exposure of cells to pharmacologic treatment that increased concentrations of cAMP.
NF1 肿瘤抑制蛋白被认为是一种 Ras 特异性鸟苷三磷酸酶激活蛋白,可限制细胞增殖。然而,The 等人(1997 年)发现,同源 NF1 基因发生无效突变的果蝇并没有表现出 RAS1 介导的信号传导受到干扰的明显迹象。NF1 的缺失导致幼虫、蛹和成虫体型缩小。操纵 RAS1 信号并不能改变这种体型缺陷,但表达活化的 3-prime,5-prime-monophosphate 依赖性腺苷蛋白激酶(PKA;见 176911)却能恢复这种缺陷。因此,NF1 和 PKA 似乎在控制果蝇整体生长的途径中相互作用。Guo 等人(1997 年)通过对果蝇 NF1 突变体的研究发现,NF1 对于神经肌肉接头处细胞对神经肽 PACAP38(垂体腺苷酸环化酶腺苷酸激活多肽)的反应至关重要。该肽诱导 3-prime、5-prime-monophosphate(cAMP)通路。这种反应在 NF1 突变体中被消除。NF1 似乎调控的是芦他巴加编码的腺苷酸环化酶,而不是 RAS-RAF 通路。此外,将细胞暴露于可增加 cAMP 浓度的药物治疗中,NF1 的缺陷也能得到挽救。

Gutmann (2001) reviewed the functions of neurofibromin and merlin, the product of the NF2 gene (607379), in tumor suppression and cell-cell signaling, respectively.
Gutmann(2001 年)回顾了神经纤维色素和 Merlin(NF2 基因 ( 607379) 的产物)分别在肿瘤抑制和细胞信号传导方面的功能。

Trovo-Marqui and Tajara (2006) provided a detailed review of neurofibromin and its role in neurofibromatosis.
Trovo-Marqui 和 Tajara(2006 年)详细综述了神经纤维瘤蛋白及其在神经纤维瘤病中的作用。

Using a proteomic approach, Phan et al. (2010) showed that ETEA (FAF2; 616935) interacted with NF1. Overexpression of ETEA downregulated NF1 in human cells. ETEA ubiquitinated the GAP-related domain of NF1 in a UBX domain-dependent manner in vitro. Silencing of ETEA increased NF1 levels and downregulated RAS activity.
Phan 等人(2010 年)利用蛋白质组学方法发现,ETEA(FAF2;616935)与 NF1 相互作用。过量表达 ETEA 会降低人体细胞中的 NF1。ETEA 在体外以 UBX 结构域依赖的方式泛素化 NF1 的 GAP 相关结构域。沉默 ETEA 会增加 NF1 水平并下调 RAS 活性。


Molecular Genetics   ▼ 分子遗传学

Neurofibromatosis Type I  神经纤维瘤病 I 型

Using pulsed field gel electrophoresis, Upadhyaya et al. (1990) identified a 90-kb deletion in the proximal portion of 17q in 1 of 90 unrelated patients with neurofibromatosis I. Viskochil et al. (1990) detected deletions of 190, 40, and 11 kb in the gene located at the 17q translocation breakpoint in 3 patients with NF1.
Viskochil 等人(1990 年)在 3 名 NF1 患者中检测到位于 17q 易位断点的基因分别有 190、40 和 11 kb 的缺失。

In an NF1 patient, Wallace et al. (1991) identified an insertion of an Alu sequence in an intron of the NF1 gene, resulting in deletion of the downstream exon during splicing and a frameshift (613113.0001).
在一名 NF1 患者身上,Wallace 等人(1991 年)发现 NF1 基因的一个内含子中插入了一个 Alu 序列,导致下游外显子在剪接过程中缺失,并出现框移位 ( 613113.0001)。

Cawthon et al. (1990) identified 2 different point mutations in the NF1 gene (L348P; 613113.0003 and R365X; 613113.0004) in patients with NF1.
Cawthon 等人(1990 年)在 NF1 患者中发现了 NF1 基因的两个不同点突变(L348P;613113.0003 和 R365X;613113.0004)。

Upadhyaya et al. (1992) identified multiple germline NF1 mutations (see, e.g., 613113.0006-613113.0009) in patients with NF1.
Upadhyaya 等人(1992 年)在 NF1 患者中发现了多种 NF1 基因突变(如 613113.0006- 613113.0009)。

Weiming et al. (1992) identified mutations in the NF1 gene in at most 3% of NF1 subjects in an analysis that covered 17% of the coding sequence by SSCP and a larger region by Southern blotting. The results suggested that most NF1 mutations lie elsewhere in the coding sequence or outside it.
Weiming 等人(1992 年)通过 SSCP 对 17% 的编码序列进行了分析,并通过 Southern 印迹对更大的区域进行了分析,结果发现最多只有 3% 的 NF1 受试者出现了 NF1 基因突变。结果表明,大多数 NF1 基因突变位于编码序列的其他地方或之外。

Collins (1993) developed FISH techniques to detect large deletions in the NF1 gene.
Collins(1993 年)开发了 FISH 技术,用于检测 NF1 基因的大缺失。

By denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE), Valero et al. (1994) screened 70 unrelated NF1 patients for mutations in exons 29 and 31. Of the 4 mutations that were identified, 3 consisted of C-to-T transitions resulting in nonsense mutations: 2 in exon 29 (5242C-T; 613113.0004 and 5260C-T) and 1 in exon 31 (5839C-T). The fourth mutation consisted of a 2-bp deletion in exon 31, 5843delAA, resulting in a premature stop codon. The 5839C-T mutation had previously been reported in 3 independent studies, suggesting that this position is a mutation hotspot within the NF1 gene. It occurs in a CpG residue.
通过变性梯度凝胶电泳 (DGGE),Valero 等人(1994 年)筛查了 70 名无亲属关系的 NF1 患者,以寻找第 29 和 31 号外显子的突变。在发现的 4 个突变中,有 3 个是由 C 到 T 的转换导致的无义突变:其中 2 个在第 29 号外显子(5242C-T;613113.0004 和 5260C-T),1 个在第 31 号外显子(5839C-T)。第四个突变是第 31 号外显子(5843delAA)缺失了 2 个 bp,导致过早终止密码子。5839C-T 突变先前已在 3 项独立研究中报告过,这表明该位置是 NF1 基因的一个突变热点。它发生在一个 CpG 残基上。

Heim et al. (1994) stated that although mutations had been sought in several hundred NF1 patients, by August 1994, only 70 germline mutations had been reported in a total of 78 individuals; only the R1947X (613113.0012) mutation had been seen in as many as 6 unrelated patients. NF1 mutations that had been identified included 14 large (more than 25 bp) deletions, 3 large insertions, 18 small (less than 25 bp) deletions, 8 small insertions, 6 nonsense mutations, 14 missense mutations, and 7 intronic mutations. At least 56 (80%) of the 70 mutations potentially encode a truncated protein because of premature translation termination.
Heim 等人(1994 年)指出,虽然已在数百名 NF1 患者中寻找突变基因,但截至 1994 年 8 月,在总共 78 名患者中只报告了 70 个种系突变基因;只有 R1947X ( 613113.0012) 突变基因在多达 6 名无亲属关系的患者中出现过。已发现的 NF1 基因突变包括 14 个大缺失(超过 25 bp)、3 个大插入、18 个小(小于 25 bp)缺失、8 个小插入、6 个无义突变、14 个错义突变和 7 个内含子突变。在这 70 个突变中,至少有 56 个(80%)可能编码了因翻译过早终止而截短的蛋白质。

Abernathy et al. (1997) stated that about half of NF1 cases represent new mutations and fewer than 100 constitutional mutations had been reported. They used a combined heteroduplex/SSCP approach to search for mutations in the NF1 gene in a set of 67 unrelated NF1 patients and identified 26 mutations and/or variants in 45 of the 59 exons tested. Disease-causing mutations were found in 19% (13 of 67) of cases studied. The mutations included splice mutations, insertions, deletions, and point changes.
Abernathy 等人(1997 年)指出,约有一半的 NF1 病例是新的突变,已报道的基因突变不到 100 例。他们在一组 67 名无血缘关系的 NF1 患者中使用了异质双链/SSCP 组合方法来寻找 NF1 基因的突变,在所检测的 59 个外显子中的 45 个外显子上发现了 26 个突变和/或变异。在所研究的病例中,有 19% 的病例(67 例中有 13 例)发现了致病突变。这些突变包括剪接突变、插入、缺失和点变化。

Maynard et al. (1997) screened exon 16 of the NF1 gene in 465 unrelated NF1 patients. Nine novel mutations were identified: 3 nonsense, 2 single-base deletions, 1 7-bp duplication, 2 missense, and 1 recurrent splice site mutation. No mutations had been reported previously in exon 16, which is the largest exon (441 bp) of NF1. The previous absence of mutation identification in exon 16 suggested to the authors that codons in this region may have a lower propensity to mutate.
Maynard 等人(1997 年)对 465 名无亲属关系的 NF1 患者的 NF1 基因第 16 号外显子进行了筛查。结果发现了九种新型突变:3个无义突变、2个单碱基缺失、1个7-bp重复、2个错义突变和1个复发性剪接位点突变。第 16 号外显子是 NF1 最大的外显子(441 bp),此前没有关于该外显子发生突变的报道。之前在第 16 号外显子中没有发现突变,这让作者认为该区域的密码子可能发生突变的倾向性较低。

Stop, or nonsense, mutations can have a number of effects. In the case of several genes, they affect mRNA metabolism and reduce the amount of detectable mRNA. Also, in the NF1 gene, a correlation between a high proportion of stop mutations and unequal expression of the 2 alleles is demonstrable. A second, less common outcome is that mRNA containing a nonsense mutation is translated and results in a truncated protein. A third possible outcome is an abnormally spliced mRNA induced by a premature-termination codon (PTC) in the skipped exon. This was demonstrated in several disease genes, including the CFTR gene (Hull et al., 1994) and the fibrillin gene (Dietz et al., 1993). Hoffmeyer et al. (1998) characterized several stop mutations localized within a few basepairs in exons 7 and 37 of the NF1 gene and noticed complete skipping of either exon in some cases. Because skipping of exons 7 and 37 does not lead to a frameshift, premature termination codons are avoided. Hoffmeyer et al. (1998) found that some other stop mutations in the same general region did not lead to a skip. Calculations of minimum-free-energy structures of the respective regions suggested that both changes in the secondary structure of mRNA and creation or disruption of exonic sequences relevant for the splicing process may in fact cause these different splice phenomena observed in the NF1 gene.
终止突变或无义突变可产生多种影响。在一些基因中,它们会影响 mRNA 代谢,减少可检测到的 mRNA 数量。此外,在 NF1 基因中,可以证明高比例的终止突变与两个等位基因的不平等表达之间存在相关性。第二种较少见的结果是,含有无义突变的 mRNA 被翻译成截短的蛋白质。第三种可能的结果是,跳过外显子中的过早终止密码子(PTC)导致 mRNA 剪接异常。这已在几个疾病基因中得到证实,包括 CFTR 基因(Hull 等人,1994 年)和纤维蛋白基因(Dietz 等人,1993 年)。Hoffmeyer 等人(1998 年)对 NF1 基因第 7 和第 37 号外显子中几个碱基对内的几个终止突变进行了鉴定,并注意到在某些情况下完全跳过了其中一个外显子。由于跳过第 7 和第 37 号外显子不会导致帧移位,因此避免了过早终止密码子。Hoffmeyer 等人(1998 年)发现,同一区域的其他一些终止突变也不会导致跳变。对相应区域的最小自由能结构的计算表明,mRNA 二级结构的变化以及与剪接过程相关的外显子序列的产生或破坏,实际上都可能导致在 NF1 基因中观察到的这些不同的剪接现象。

Mutation analysis in NF1 has been hampered by the large size of the gene (350 kb with 60 exons), the high rate of new mutations, lack of mutational clustering, and the presence of numerous homologous loci. Mutation detection methods based on the direct analysis of the RNA transcript of the gene permit the rapid screening of large multiexonic genes. However, detection of frameshift or nonsense mutations can be limited by instability of the mutant mRNA species due to nonsense-mediated decay. To determine the frequency of this allelic exclusion, Osborn and Upadhyaya (1999) analyzed total lymphocyte RNA from 15 NF1 patients with known truncation mutations and a panel of 40 NF1 patients with unknown mutations. The level of expression of the mutant message was greatly reduced in 2 of the 15 samples (13%), and in 3 of the 18 informative samples from the panel of 40. A coupled RT-PCR and protein truncation test method was subsequently applied to screen RNA from the panel of 40 unrelated NF1 patients. Aberrant polypeptide bands were identified and characterized in 21 samples (53%); each of these had a different mutation. The mutations were uniformly distributed across the gene, and 14 represented novel changes, providing further information on the germline mutational spectrum of the NF1 gene.
由于 NF1 基因体积庞大(350 kb,有 60 个外显子)、新突变率高、缺乏突变聚类以及存在众多同源基因位点,该基因的突变分析一直受到阻碍。基于基因 RNA 转录本直接分析的突变检测方法可以快速筛查大型多外显子基因。然而,由于无义介导的衰变导致突变 mRNA 的不稳定性,帧移或无义突变的检测可能会受到限制。为了确定这种等位基因排斥的频率,Osborn 和 Upadhyaya(1999 年)分析了 15 名已知截断突变的 NF1 患者和 40 名未知突变的 NF1 患者的总淋巴细胞 RNA。在 15 个样本中,有 2 个样本(13%)的突变信息表达水平大大降低,在 40 个样本中的 18 个有信息的样本中,有 3 个样本的突变信息表达水平也大大降低。随后,我们采用 RT-PCR 和蛋白质截断测试耦合方法,对来自 40 位无关联 NF1 患者的 RNA 进行了筛查。在 21 个样本(53%)中发现了异常多肽带,并对其进行了鉴定;其中每个样本都有不同的突变。这些突变均匀地分布在整个基因中,其中 14 个突变代表了新的变化,为 NF1 基因的种系突变谱提供了进一步的信息。

The mutation rate in the NF1 gene is one of the highest known in humans, with approximately 50% of all NF1 patients presenting with novel mutations (review by Huson and Hughes, 1994). Despite the high frequency of this disorder in all populations, relatively few mutations had been identified at the molecular level, with most unique to 1 family. A limited number of mutation 'hotspots' had been identified: R1947X in exon 31 (613113.0012), and the 4-bp region between nucleotides 6789 and 6792 in exon 37, both implicated in about 2% of NF1 patients (review by Upadhyaya and Cooper (1998)). Messiaen et al. (1999) identified another mutation hotspot in exon 10b. By analyzing 232 unrelated NF1 patients, they identified 9 mutations in exon 10b, indicating that this exon is mutated in almost 4% of NF1 patients. Two mutations, Y489C (613113.0023) and L508P (613113.0024), were recurrent, whereas the others were unique. The authors suggested that since 10b shows the highest mutation rate of any of the 60 NF1 exons, it should be given priority in mutation analysis.
NF1 基因的突变率是人类已知的最高突变率之一,在所有 NF1 患者中,约有 50% 的人出现新的突变(Huson 和 Hughes 的评论,1994 年)。尽管这种疾病在所有人群中的发病率都很高,但在分子水平上发现的突变却相对较少,大多数突变都是一个家族独有的。已发现的突变 "热点 "数量有限:第 31 号外显子中的 R1947X(613113.0012)和第 37 号外显子中核苷酸 6789 和 6792 之间的 4-bp 区域都与约 2% 的 NF1 患者有关(Upadhyaya 和 Cooper(1998 年)的综述)。Messiaen 等人(1999 年)在外显子 10b 中发现了另一个突变热点。通过分析 232 名无亲属关系的 NF1 患者,他们在第 10b 号外显子中发现了 9 个突变,表明该外显子在近 4% 的 NF1 患者中发生了突变。Y489C(613113.0023)和L508P(613113.0024)这两个突变是复发性的,而其他突变则是独特的。作者建议,由于 10b 在 60 个 NF1 外显子中突变率最高,因此在突变分析中应优先考虑它。

Fahsold et al. (2000) performed a mutation screen of the NF1 gene in more than 500 unrelated patients with NF1. For each patient, the whole coding sequence and all splice sites were studied for aberrations, either by the protein truncation test (PTT), temperature-gradient gel electrophoresis (TGGE) of genomic PCR products, or, most often, by direct genomic sequencing of all individual exons. Of the variants found, they concluded that 161 different ones were novel. Mutation-detection efficiencies of the various screening methods were similar: 47.1% for PTT, 53.7% for TGGE, and 54.9% for direct sequencing. Of all sequence variants found, less than 20% represented C-to-T or G-to-A transitions within a CpG dinucleotide, and only 6 different mutations also occurred in NF1 pseudogenes, with 5 being typical C-to-T transitions in a CpG. Thus, neither frequent deamination of 5-methylcytosines nor interchromosomal gene conversion can account for the high mutation rate of the NF1 gene. As opposed to the truncating mutations, the 28 (10.1%) missense or single-amino-acid-deletion mutations identified clustered in 2 distinct regions, the GAP-related domain and an upstream gene segment comprising exons 11 to 17. The latter forms a so-called cysteine/serine-rich domain with 3 cysteine pairs suggestive of ATP binding, as well as 3 potential cAMP-dependent protein kinase recognition sites obviously phosphorylated by PKA. Coincidence of mutated amino acids and those conserved between human and Drosophila strongly suggested significant functional relevance of this region, with major roles played by exons 12a and 15 and part of exon 16.
Fahsold 等人(2000 年)对 500 多名无亲属关系的 NF1 患者进行了 NF1 基因突变筛查。他们通过蛋白质截断试验(PTT)、基因组 PCR 产物的温度梯度凝胶电泳(TGGE)或最常见的对所有单个外显子的直接基因组测序,对每位患者的整个编码序列和所有剪接位点进行了畸变研究。在发现的变异中,他们认为有 161 个不同的变异是新型的。各种筛选方法的变异检测效率相似:PTT 为 47.1%,TGGE 为 53.7%,直接测序为 54.9%。在发现的所有序列变异中,只有不到 20% 代表 CpG 二核苷酸中的 C 到 T 或 G 到 A 转变,而且只有 6 种不同的突变也出现在 NF1 假基因中,其中 5 种是 CpG 中典型的 C 到 T 转变。因此,5-甲基胞嘧啶频繁脱氨基或染色体间基因转换都不能解释 NF1 基因的高突变率。与截断突变不同,已发现的 28 个(10.1%)错义或单氨基酸缺失突变集中在两个不同的区域,即 GAP 相关域和由 11 至 17 号外显子组成的上游基因片段。后者形成了一个所谓的半胱氨酸/丝氨酸富集区,其中有 3 对半胱氨酸表明与 ATP 结合,还有 3 个潜在的 cAMP 依赖性蛋白激酶识别位点明显被 PKA 磷酸化。突变氨基酸与人类和果蝇之间保守氨基酸的共存强烈表明,该区域具有重要的功能相关性,其中起主要作用的是第 12a 和 15 号外显子以及第 16 号外显子的一部分。

Ars et al. (2000) applied a whole NF1 cDNA screening methodology to the study of 80 unrelated NF1 patients and identified 44 different mutations, 32 being novel, in 52 of the patients. Mutations were detected in 87% of the familial cases and in 51% of the sporadic ones. At least 15 of the 80 NF1 patients (19%) had recurrence of a previously observed mutation. The study showed that in 50% of the patients in whom the mutations were identified, these resulted in splicing alterations. Most of the splicing mutations did not involve the conserved AG/GT dinucleotides of the donor and acceptor splice sites. One frameshift, 2 nonsense, and 2 missense mutations were also responsible for alterations in mRNA splicing. Location and type of mutation within the NF1 gene and its putative effect at the protein level did not indicate any relationship to any specific clinical feature of NF1. The high proportion of aberrant spliced transcripts detected in NF1 patients stressed the importance of studying mutations at both the genomic and RNA level. Ars et al. (2000) raised the possibility that part of the clinical variability in NF1 is related to mutations affecting mRNA splicing, which is the most common molecular defect in NF1.
Ars 等人(2000 年)在对 80 名无亲属关系的 NF1 患者进行研究时,采用了一种全 NF1 cDNA 筛查方法,在 52 名患者中发现了 44 种不同的突变,其中 32 种是新型突变。在 87% 的家族病例和 51% 的散发性病例中发现了突变。在 80 例 NF1 患者中,至少有 15 例(19%)先前观察到的突变再次发生。研究显示,在发现突变的患者中,50%的患者发生了剪接改变。大多数剪接突变不涉及供体和受体剪接位点的保守 AG/GT 二核苷酸。一个移帧突变、两个无义突变和两个错义突变也导致了 mRNA 剪接的改变。NF1基因内突变的位置和类型及其在蛋白质水平上的推测效应并未表明与NF1的任何特定临床特征有任何关系。在 NF1 患者中检测到的高比例异常剪接转录本强调了研究基因组和 RNA 水平突变的重要性。Ars 等人(2000 年)提出,NF1 的部分临床变异可能与影响 mRNA 剪接的突变有关,而 mRNA 剪接是 NF1 最常见的分子缺陷。

Messiaen et al. (2000) studied 67 unrelated NF1 patients fulfilling the NIH diagnostic criteria (Stumpf et al., 1988; Gutmann et al., 1997), 29 familial and 38 sporadic cases, using a cascade of complementary techniques. They performed a protein truncation test starting from puromycin-treated EBV cell lines and, if no mutation was found, continued with heteroduplex, FISH, Southern blot, and cytogenetic analysis. The authors identified the germline mutation in 64 of 67 patients, and 32 of the mutations were novel. The mutation spectrum consisted of 25 nonsense, 12 frameshift, 19 splice mutations, 6 missense and/or small in-frame deletions, 1 deletion of the entire NF1 gene, and a translocation t(14;17)(q32;q11.2). Their data suggested that exons 10a-10c and 37 are mutation-rich regions and that together with some recurrent mutations they may account for almost 30% of the mutations in classic NF1 patients. Messiaen et al. (2000) found a high frequency of unusual splice mutations outside of the AG/GT 5-prime and 3-prime splice sites. As some of these mutations formed stable transcripts, it remained possible that a truncated neurofibromin was formed.
Messiaen 等人(2000 年)使用一系列互补技术,对符合美国国立卫生研究院诊断标准(Stumpf 等人,1988 年;Gutmann 等人,1997 年)的 67 例无亲属关系的 NF1 患者(29 例家族病例和 38 例散发性病例)进行了研究。他们从嘌呤霉素处理过的 EBV 细胞系开始进行蛋白质截断测试,如果没有发现突变,则继续进行异质双链、FISH、Southern 印迹和细胞遗传学分析。在 67 例患者中,作者发现了 64 例患者的种系突变,其中 32 例为新突变。突变谱包括 25 个无义突变、12 个框移突变、19 个剪接突变、6 个错义突变和/或小的框内缺失、1 个整个 NF1 基因的缺失以及 t(14;17)(q32;q11.2)易位。他们的数据表明,10a-10c 和 37 号外显子是突变富集区,加上一些复发性突变,它们可能占典型 NF1 患者突变的近 30%。Messiaen 等人(2000 年)在 AG/GT 5-prime 和 3-prime 剪接位点之外发现了高频率的异常剪接突变。由于其中一些突变形成了稳定的转录本,因此仍有可能形成截短的神经纤维瘤蛋白。

Skuse and Cappione (1997) reviewed the possible molecular basis of the wide clinical variability in NF1 observed even among affected members of the same family (Huson et al., 1989). The complexities of alternative splicing and RNA editing may be involved. Skuse and Cappione (1997) suggested that the classical 2-hit model for tumor suppressor inactivation used to explain NF1 tumorigenesis can be expanded to include post-transcriptional mechanisms that regulate NF1 gene expression. Aberrations in these mechanisms may play a role in the observed clinical variability.
Skuse 和 Cappione(1997 年)回顾了即使在同一家族的受影响成员中也能观察到 NF1 临床差异的可能分子基础(Huson 等人,1989 年)。替代剪接和 RNA 编辑的复杂性可能与此有关。Skuse 和 Cappione(1997 年)建议,用于解释 NF1 肿瘤发生的经典肿瘤抑制因子失活 2 次打击模型可以扩展到包括调控 NF1 基因表达的转录后机制。这些机制的畸变可能是导致所观察到的临床变异的原因之一。

Eisenbarth et al. (2000) described a systematic approach of searching for somatic inactivation of the NF1 gene in neurofibromas. In the course of these studies, they identified 2 novel intragenic polymorphisms: a tetranucleotide repeat and a 21-bp duplication. Among 7 neurofibromas from 4 different NF1 patients, they detected 3 tumor-specific point mutations and 2 LOH events. The results suggested that small subtle mutations occur with similar frequency to that of LOH in benign neurofibromas and that somatic inactivation of the NF1 gene is a general event in these tumors. Eisenbarth et al. (2000) concluded that the spectrum of somatic mutations occurring in various tumors from individual NF1 patients may contribute to the understanding of variable expressivity of the NF1 phenotype.
Eisenbarth 等人(2000 年)描述了在神经纤维瘤中寻找 NF1 基因体细胞失活的系统方法。在这些研究过程中,他们发现了两个新的基因内多态性:一个四核苷酸重复和一个 21-bp 重复。在来自 4 名不同 NF1 患者的 7 个神经纤维瘤中,他们发现了 3 个肿瘤特异性点突变和 2 个 LOH 事件。结果表明,在良性神经纤维瘤中,微小突变的发生频率与 LOH 的发生频率相似,NF1 基因的体细胞失活是这些肿瘤的普遍现象。Eisenbarth 等人(2000 年)总结说,NF1 患者不同肿瘤中出现的体细胞突变谱可能有助于了解 NF1 表型的不同表达方式。

Klose et al. (1998) identified a novel missense mutation in the NF1 gene (R1276P; 613113.0022) in a patient with a classic multisymptomatic NF1 phenotype, including a malignant schwannoma. The mutation specifically abolished the Ras-GTPase-activating function of neurofibromin. The authors suggested that therapeutic approaches aimed at the reduction of the Ras-GTP levels in neural crest-derived cells may relieve NF1 symptoms.
Klose 等人(1998 年)在一名具有典型多症状 NF1 表型(包括恶性裂隙瘤)的患者身上发现了 NF1 基因的新型错义突变(R1276P;613113.0022)。该突变特异性地取消了神经纤维瘤蛋白的 Ras-GTP 酶激活功能。作者认为,旨在降低神经嵴衍生细胞中Ras-GTP水平的治疗方法可以缓解NF1症状。

Kluwe et al. (1999) stated that plexiform neurofibroma can be found in about 30% of NF1 patients, often causing severe clinical symptoms. They examined 14 such tumors from 10 NF1 patients for loss of heterozygosity at the NF1 gene using 4 intragenic polymorphic markers. LOH was found in 8 tumors from 5 patients, and was suspected in 1 additional tumor from another patient. They interpreted these findings as suggesting that loss of the second allele, and thus inactivation of both alleles of the NF1 gene, is associated with the development of plexiform neurofibromas. The 14 plexiform neurofibromas were also examined for mutation in the TP53 gene; no mutations were found.
Kluwe 等人(1999 年)指出,约 30% 的 NF1 患者会出现丛状神经纤维瘤,通常会引起严重的临床症状。他们使用 4 个基因内多态性标记对 10 名 NF1 患者的 14 个此类肿瘤进行了检查,以确定 NF1 基因是否存在杂合性缺失。在 5 名患者的 8 个肿瘤中发现了 LOH,在另一名患者的 1 个肿瘤中也怀疑存在 LOH。他们认为这些发现表明,第二个等位基因的缺失,即 NF1 基因两个等位基因的失活,与丛状神经纤维瘤的发生有关。他们还对 14 例丛状神经纤维瘤进行了 TP53 基因突变检测,结果未发现突变。

Faravelli et al. (1999) reported a family in which 7 members developed brain tumors which in 4 were confirmed as gliomas. Three of these individuals had a clinical history strongly suggestive of NF1. Two individuals with very mild features of NF1 insufficient to meet diagnostic criteria carried a splice site mutation in intron 29 of the NF1 gene, creating a frameshift and premature protein termination. Faravelli et al. (1999) noted the unusually high incidence of brain tumors in this family with the NF1 phenotype and suggested that some cases of familial glioma may be explained by mutations in the NF1 gene.
Faravelli 等人(1999 年)报告了一个家族中 7 名成员患脑瘤的病例,其中 4 人被确诊为胶质瘤。其中 3 人的临床病史强烈提示 NF1。有两个人的 NF1 特征非常轻微,不足以达到诊断标准,但他们的 NF1 基因内含子 29 的剪接位点发生了突变,造成了框架移位和蛋白质过早终止。Faravelli 等人(1999 年)指出,在这个具有 NF1 表型的家族中,脑肿瘤的发病率异常高,并认为一些家族性胶质瘤病例可能是由 NF1 基因突变引起的。

Kluwe et al. (2003) examined 20 patients with spinal tumors from 17 families for clinical symptoms associated with NF1 and for NF1 mutations. Typical NF1 features were found in 12 patients from 11 families. Typical NF1 mutations were found in 10 of the 11 index patients in this group, including 8 truncating mutations, 1 missense mutation, and 1 deletion of the entire NF1 gene. Eight patients from 6 families had no or only a few additional NF1-associated symptoms besides multiple spinal tumors, which were distributed symmetrically in all cases and affected all 38 nerve roots in 6 patients. Only mild NF1 mutations were found in 4 of the 6 index patients in the latter group, including 1 splicing mutation, 2 missense mutations, and 1 nonsense mutation in exon 47 at the 3-prime end of the gene. The data indicated that patients with spinal tumors can have various NF1 symptoms and NF1 mutations; however, patients with no or only a few additional NF1 symptoms may be a subgroup or may have a distinct form of NF1, probably associated with milder NF1 mutations or other genetic alterations.
Kluwe 等人(2003 年)对来自 17 个家庭的 20 名脊髓肿瘤患者进行了检查,以了解与 NF1 相关的临床症状和 NF1 基因突变情况。在 11 个家族的 12 名患者中发现了典型的 NF1 特征。在这一组的 11 位指标患者中,有 10 位发现了典型的 NF1 基因突变,包括 8 个截断突变、1 个错义突变和 1 个整个 NF1 基因的缺失。来自6个家庭的8名患者除了多发性脊柱肿瘤外,没有或仅有少数几个额外的NF1相关症状,所有病例的脊柱肿瘤均对称分布,6名患者的38个神经根全部受累。在后一组的 6 名指标患者中,有 4 人仅发现轻微的 NF1 基因突变,包括 1 个剪接突变、2 个错义突变和 1 个无义突变,突变位于该基因 3-质子端的第 47 号外显子。这些数据表明,脊髓肿瘤患者可能具有各种NF1症状和NF1突变;然而,没有或仅有少数几种额外NF1症状的患者可能是一个亚组,也可能具有一种独特的NF1形式,可能与较轻的NF1突变或其他基因改变有关。

The underestimates of NF1 gene mutations in neurofibromatosis type I have been attributed to the large size of the NF1 gene, the considerable frequency of gross deletions, and the common occurrence of splicing defects that are only detectable by cDNA analysis. A number of splicing errors do not affect the canonical GT splice donor or AG splice acceptor, or create novel splice sites, but may exert their effect by means of an altered interaction between an exonic splice enhancer (ESE) and mRNA splicing factors (Messiaen et al., 2000; Liu et al., 2001). Colapietro et al. (2003) reported skipping of exon 7 and sequence alterations in ESEs in a patient with severe NF1 (613113.0036).
神经纤维瘤病 I 型中 NF1 基因突变的低估归因于 NF1 基因的巨大体积、大量缺失的发生频率以及只能通过 cDNA 分析才能检测到的剪接缺陷的常见发生。一些剪接错误并不影响正常的 GT 剪接供体或 AG 剪接受体,也不产生新的剪接位点,但可能通过改变外显子剪接增强子(ESE)与 mRNA 剪接因子之间的相互作用而产生影响(Messiaen 等人,2000 年;刘等人,2001 年)。Colapietro 等人(2003 年)报告了一名重度 NF1(613113.0036)患者的第 7 号外显子缺失和 ESE 序列改变。

The analysis of somatic NF1 gene mutations in neurofibromas from NF1 patients shows that each neurofibroma results from an individual second hit mutation; thus, factors that influence somatic mutation rates may be regarded as potential modifiers of NF1. Wiest et al. (2003) performed a mutation screen of numerous neurofibromas from 2 NF1 patients and found a predominance of point mutations, small deletions, and insertions as second hit mutations in both patients. Seven novel mutations were reported. Together with the results of studies that showed LOH as the predominant second hit in neurofibromas of other patients, these results suggest that in different patients different factors may influence the somatic mutation rate and thereby the severity of the disease.
对 NF1 患者神经纤维瘤中体细胞 NF1 基因突变的分析表明,每个神经纤维瘤都是由单个二次突变引起的;因此,影响体细胞突变率的因素可被视为 NF1 的潜在修饰因子。Wiest 等人(2003 年)对两名 NF1 患者的多个神经纤维瘤进行了突变筛查,发现这两名患者的二次突变主要是点突变、小缺失和插入。该研究报告了七种新的突变。这些结果表明,在不同的患者身上,不同的因素可能会影响体细胞突变率,从而影响疾病的严重程度。

Not only can mutations in nucleotides at the ends of introns result in abnormalities of splicing, but nonsense, missense, and even translationally silent mutations have been shown to cause exon skipping. The analysis of individual mutations of this kind can shed light on basic pre-mRNA splicing mechanisms. Using cDNA-based mutation detection analysis, Zatkova et al. (2004) identified 1 missense and 6 nonsense mutations (e.g., 613113.0042) that lead to different extents of exon-lacking transcripts in NF1 patients. They confirmed mutation-associated exon skipping in a heterologous hybrid minigene context. Because of evidence that the disruption of functional ESE sequences is frequently the mechanism underlying mutation-associated exon skipping, Zatkova et al. (2004) examined the wildtype and mutant NF1 sequences with 2 available ESE prediction programs. Either or both programs predicted the disruption of ESE motifs in 6 of the 7 analyzed mutations. To ascertain the function of the predicted ESEs, Zatkova et al. (2004) quantitatively measured their ability to rescue splicing of an enhancer-dependent exon, and found that all 7 mutant ESEs had reduced splicing enhancement activity compared to the wildtype sequences. The results suggested that the wildtype sequences function as ESE elements, whose disruption is responsible for the mutation-associated exon skipping observed in NF1 patients. Furthermore, this study illustrated the utility of ESE prediction programs for delineating candidate sequences that may serve as ESE elements.
不仅内含子末端的核苷酸突变会导致剪接异常,而且无义突变、错义突变甚至翻译沉默突变也会导致外显子跳转。对这类单个突变的分析可以揭示基本的前核糖核酸剪接机制。通过基于 cDNA 的突变检测分析,Zatkova 等人(2004 年)在 NF1 患者中发现了 1 个错义突变和 6 个无义突变(如 613113.0042),这些突变导致了不同程度的外显子缺失转录本。他们在异源杂交小基因背景下证实了与突变相关的外显子缺失。由于有证据表明,功能性 ESE 序列的破坏往往是突变相关外显子缺失的基本机制,Zatkova 等人(2004 年)用两种可用的 ESE 预测程序检查了野生型和突变型 NF1 序列。在所分析的 7 个突变中,有 6 个突变的 ESE 基序被这两个或其中之一预测为中断。为了确定所预测的 ESE 的功能,Zatkova 等人(2004 年)定量测量了它们对增强子依赖外显子剪接的挽救能力,结果发现与野生型序列相比,所有 7 个突变 ESE 的剪接增强活性都有所降低。结果表明,野生型序列具有 ESE 元件的功能,NF1 患者中观察到的与突变相关的外显子跳越就是由其破坏造成的。此外,这项研究还说明了ESE预测程序在确定可能作为ESE元件的候选序列方面的实用性。

In a girl with aniridia (106210), microphthalmia, microcephaly, and cafe-au-lait macules, Henderson et al. (2007) identified heterozygous mutations in the PAX6 (R38W; 607108.0026), NF1 (R192X; 613113.0046), and OTX2 (Y179X; 600037.0004) genes. Her mother, who carried the NF1 and PAX6 mutations, had NF1 with typical eye defects; in addition, although her eyes were of normal size, she had small corneas, and also had cataracts, optic nerve hypoplasia, nystagmus, and mild iris stromal hypoplasia with normal-sized pupils. The proband's father, who had multiple ocular defects (MCOPS5; 610125), had previously been studied by Ragge et al. (2005) and was heterozygous for the OTX2 nonsense mutation. Henderson et al. (2007) noted that the proband's phenotype was surprisingly mild, given that mutations in PAX6, OTX2, or NF1 can cause a variety of severe developmental defects.
在一个患有无眼球症(106210)、小眼球症、小头畸形和咖啡色斑疹的女孩身上,Henderson 等人(2007 年)发现了 PAX6(R38W;607108.0026)、NF1(R192X;613113.0046)和 OTX2(Y179X;600037.0004)基因的杂合突变。她的母亲携带 NF1 和 PAX6 基因突变,患有 NF1 并伴有典型的眼部缺陷;此外,虽然她的眼睛大小正常,但角膜较小,还患有白内障、视神经发育不全、眼球震颤和轻度虹膜基质发育不全,瞳孔大小正常。Ragge 等人(2005 年)曾对该患者的父亲进行过研究,他的父亲患有多种眼部缺陷(MCOPS5;610125),是 OTX2 无义突变的杂合子。Henderson 等人(2007 年)注意到,鉴于 PAX6、OTX2 或 NF1 的突变可导致多种严重的发育缺陷,该患者的表型出奇地轻微。

Sabbagh et al. (2009) examined the phenotypic correlations between affected relatives in 750 NF1 patients from 275 multiplex families collected through the NF-France Network. Twelve NF1-related clinical features, including 5 quantitative traits (number of cafe-au-lait spots of small size and of large size, and number of cutaneous, subcutaneous, and plexiform neurofibromas) and 7 binary ones, were scored. All clinical features studied, with the exception of neoplasms, showed significant familial aggregation after adjusting for age and sex. For most of them, patterns of familial correlations indicated a strong genetic component with no apparent influence of the constitutional NF1 mutation. Heritability estimates of the 5 quantitative traits ranged from 0.26 to 0.62. Nine tag SNPs in NF1 were genotyped in 1,132 individuals from 313 NF1 families. No significant deviations of transmission of any of the NF1 variants to affected offspring was found for any of the 12 clinical features examined, based on single marker or haplotype analysis. Sabbagh et al. (2009) concluded that genetic modifiers, unlinked to the NF1 locus, contribute to the variable expressivity of the disease.
Sabbagh 等人(2009 年)研究了通过法国 NF 网络收集的 275 个多病家族中 750 名 NF1 患者的患病亲属之间的表型相关性。他们对 12 个与 NF1 相关的临床特征进行了评分,包括 5 个定量特征(小面积和大面积咖啡色斑的数量,以及皮肤、皮下和丛状神经纤维瘤的数量)和 7 个二元特征。除肿瘤外,所研究的所有临床特征在调整年龄和性别后都显示出明显的家族聚集性。对于其中的大多数特征,家族相关性模式表明有很强的遗传因素,而NF1基因突变并没有明显的影响。5 个数量性状的遗传率估计值从 0.26 到 0.62 不等。在 313 个 NF1 家系的 1132 个个体中,对 NF1 中的 9 个标记 SNP 进行了基因分型。根据单标记或单体型分析,在所研究的 12 个临床特征中,没有发现任何一个 NF1 变体向受影响后代的传递存在明显偏差。Sabbagh 等人(2009 年)得出结论认为,与 NF1 基因座无关的遗传修饰因子导致了该疾病多变的表现性。

Juvenile Myelomonocytic Leukemia
幼年粒细胞白血病

Juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML; 607785) is a pediatric myelodysplastic syndrome that is associated with neurofibromatosis type I. The NF1 gene regulates the growth of immature myeloid cells by accelerating guanosine triphosphate hydrolysis on RAS proteins. Side et al. (1998) undertook a study to determine if the NF1 gene is involved in the pathogenesis of JMML in children without a clinical diagnosis of NF1. An in vitro transcription and translation system was used to screen JMML marrows from 20 children for NF1 mutations that resulted in a truncated protein. SSCP analysis was used to detect RAS point mutations in these samples. Side et al. (1998) confirmed mutations of NF1 in 3 cases of JMML, 1 of which also showed loss of the normal NF1 allele. An NF1 mutation was detected in normal tissue from the only patient tested, suggesting that JMML may be the presenting feature of NF1 in some children. Activating RAS mutations were found in 4 patients; as expected, none of these samples harbored NF1 mutations. Because 10 to 14% of children with JMML had a clinical diagnosis of NF1, these data were consistent with the existence of NF1 mutations in approximately 30% of JMML cases.
幼年髓单核细胞白血病(JMML;607785)是一种小儿骨髓增生异常综合征,与神经纤维瘤病 I 型有关。NF1 基因通过加速 RAS 蛋白上的三磷酸鸟苷水解来调节未成熟髓系细胞的生长。Side 等人(1998 年)进行了一项研究,以确定 NF1 基因是否与临床诊断为 NF1 的儿童 JMML 的发病机制有关。他们使用体外转录和翻译系统对 20 名儿童的 JMML 骨髓进行筛选,寻找 NF1 基因突变导致的截短蛋白。SSCP 分析用于检测这些样本中的 RAS 点突变。Side 等人(1998 年)在 3 例 JMML 中证实了 NF1 基因突变,其中 1 例还显示了正常 NF1 等位基因的缺失。在唯一受检患者的正常组织中检测到 NF1 基因突变,这表明 JMML 可能是某些儿童 NF1 的表现特征。在 4 名患者中发现了活化的 RAS 基因突变;不出所料,这些样本均未携带 NF1 基因突变。由于10%到14%的JMML患儿临床诊断为NF1,这些数据与大约30%的JMML病例存在NF1突变相一致。

The risk of malignant myeloid disorders in young children with NF1 is 200 to 500 times the normal risk. Neurofibromin, the protein encoded by the NF1 gene, negatively regulates signals transduced by Ras proteins. Genetic and biochemical data support the hypothesis that NF1 functions as a tumor-suppressor gene in immature myeloid cells. This hypothesis was further supported by the demonstration by Side et al. (1997) that both NF1 alleles were inactivated in bone marrow cells from children with NF1 complicated by malignant myeloid disorders. Using an in vitro transcription and translation system, they screened bone marrow samples from 18 such children for NF1 mutations that cause a truncated protein. Mutations were confirmed by direct sequencing of genomic DNA from the patients, and from the affected parents in cases of familial NF1. Side et al. (1997) found that the normal NF1 allele was absent in bone marrow samples from 5 of 8 children who had truncating mutations of the NF1 gene.
患有 NF1 的幼儿罹患恶性骨髓疾病的风险是正常风险的 200 到 500 倍。由 NF1 基因编码的蛋白质 Neurofibromin 负向调节 Ras 蛋白传递的信号。遗传和生化数据支持 NF1 在未成熟髓系细胞中作为肿瘤抑制基因发挥作用的假设。Side 等人(1997 年)证明,在患有 NF1 并发恶性髓系疾病的儿童骨髓细胞中,两个 NF1 等位基因都失活了,从而进一步支持了这一假设。他们利用体外转录和翻译系统,对 18 名此类儿童的骨髓样本进行了筛查,以寻找导致截短蛋白的 NF1 基因突变。他们对患者的基因组 DNA 进行了直接测序,并对家族性 NF1 病例中患病父母的基因组 DNA 进行了测序,从而确认了突变。Side 等人(1997 年)发现,在 8 名 NF1 基因发生截短突变的儿童中,有 5 名儿童的骨髓样本中没有正常的 NF1 等位基因。

Neurofibromatosis-Noonan Syndrome
神经纤维瘤病-努南综合征

The overlap syndrome neurofibromatosis-Noonan syndrome (601321) shows features of both disorders, as was first noted by Allanson et al. (1985). Colley et al. (1996) examined 94 sequentially identified patients with NF1 from their genetic register and found Noonan features in 12. Carey et al. (1997) identified a 3-bp deletion of exon 17 of the NF1 gene in a family with NFNS (613113.0033). Stevenson et al. (2006) provided a follow-up of this family. Baralle et al. (2003) identified mutations in the NF1 gene in 2 patients with the overlap syndrome (613113.0034 and 613113.0035).
重叠综合征神经纤维瘤病-努南综合征(601321)显示了这两种疾病的特征,Allanson 等人(1985 年)首先注意到了这一点。Colley 等人(1996 年)从他们的基因登记册中检查了 94 名按顺序确认的 NF1 患者,发现其中 12 人具有努南特征。Carey 等人(1997 年)在一个 NFNS(613113.0033)家族中发现了 NF1 基因第 17 号外显子的 3-bp 缺失。Stevenson 等人(2006 年)对该家族进行了跟踪调查。Baralle 等人(2003 年)在两名重叠综合征患者(613113.0034 和 613113.0035)中发现了 NF1 基因突变。

Bertola et al. (2005) provided molecular evidence of the concurrence of neurofibromatosis and Noonan syndrome in a patient with a de novo missense mutation in the NF1 gene (613113.0043) and a mutation in the PTPN11 gene (176876.0023) inherited from her father. The proposita was noted to have cafe-au-lait spots at birth. Valvar and infundibular pulmonary stenosis and aortic coarctation were diagnosed at 20 months of age and surgically corrected at 3 years of age. As illustrated, the patient had marked hypertelorism and proptosis as well as freckling and cafe-au-lait spots. Lisch nodules were present. At the age of 8 years, a pilocytic astrocytoma in the suprasellar region involving the optic chiasm (first presenting symptomatically at 2 years of age), was partially resected. The father, who was diagnosed with Noonan syndrome, had downslanting palpebral fissures and prominent nasal labial folds. He was of short stature (159 cm) and had pectus excavatum. Electrocardiogram showed left-anterior hemiblock and complete right bundle branch block.
Bertola 等人(2005 年)提供了神经纤维瘤病和努南综合征并发的分子证据,该患者的 NF1 基因(613113.0043)发生了新的错义突变,PTPN11 基因(176876.0023)也发生了突变。患者出生时就发现身上有咖啡色斑块。20 个月大时诊断出瓣膜和肺底狭窄以及主动脉瓣闭锁,3 岁时进行了手术矫正。如图所示,患者有明显的肥大和突眼,以及雀斑和咖啡色斑。身上有李氏结节。8 岁时,患者小脑上部的朝粒细胞星形细胞瘤累及视丘(2 岁时首次出现症状),部分切除。父亲被诊断患有努南综合征,睑裂下垂,鼻唇沟突出。他身材矮小(159 厘米),并伴有鸡胸。心电图显示左心前传导阻滞和完全性右束支传导阻滞。

In a study of 17 unrelated subjects with NFNS, De Luca et al. (2005) found NF1 gene defects in 16. Remarkably, there was a high prevalence of in-frame defects affecting exons 24 and 25, which encode a portion of the GAP-related domain. No defect was observed in PTPN11 (176876), which is the usual site of mutations causing classic Noonan syndrome. De Luca et al. (2005) stated that including their study, 18 distinct NF1 gene mutations had been described in 22 unrelated patients with NFNS.
De Luca 等人(2005 年)对 17 名非亲属关系的 NFNS 患者进行了研究,发现其中 16 人存在 NF1 基因缺陷。值得注意的是,影响第 24 和 25 号外显子的框内缺陷发生率很高,这两个外显子编码了 GAP 相关结构域的一部分。在 PTPN11(176876)中没有观察到缺陷,而这是导致典型努南综合征的常见突变位点。De Luca 等人(2005 年)指出,包括他们的研究在内,在 22 名无亲属关系的 NFNS 患者中发现了 18 种不同的 NF1 基因突变。

Watson Syndrome  沃森综合征

Watson syndrome (193520) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by pulmonic stenosis, cafe-au-lait spots, decreased intellectual ability, and short stature. Most affected individuals have relative macrocephaly and Lisch nodules and about one-third of those affected have neurofibromas. Because of clinical similarities between Watson syndrome and neurofibromatosis, Allanson et al. (1991) performed linkage studies in families with Watson syndrome, using probes known to flank the NF1 gene on chromosome 17, and found tight linkage. In a patient with Watson syndrome, Upadhyaya et al. (1992) identified an 80-kb deletion in the NF1 gene (613113.0011). Tassabehji et al. (1993) demonstrated an almost perfect in-frame tandem duplication of 42 bases in exon 28 of the NF1 gene in 3 members of a family with Watson syndrome (613113.0010).
沃森综合征(Watson Syndrome,193520)是一种常染色体显性遗传疾病,以肺动脉狭窄、咖啡色斑、智力下降和身材矮小为特征。大多数患者有相对巨头畸形和李施结节,约三分之一的患者有神经纤维瘤。由于沃森综合征与神经纤维瘤病的临床表现相似,Allanson 等人(1991 年)利用已知位于 17 号染色体 NF1 基因侧翼的探针,对沃森综合征家族进行了连锁研究,发现两者之间存在紧密的连锁关系。Upadhyaya 等人(1992 年)在一名沃森综合征患者身上发现了 NF1 基因(613113.0011)的 80-kb 缺失。Tassabehji 等人(1993 年)在一个沃森综合征家族的 3 名成员中发现,NF1 基因第 28 号外显子(613113.0010)有一个几乎完美的 42 个碱基的框架内串联重复。

Spinal Neurofibromatosis  脊髓神经纤维瘤病

In all 5 affected members of 3-generation family with spinal neurofibromatosis (162210) and cafe-au-lait spots, Ars et al. (1998) identified a frameshift mutation in the NF1 gene (613113.0018).
Ars 等人(1998 年)在一个患有脊髓神经纤维瘤病(162210)和咖啡色花斑的三代家族的所有五名成员中,发现了 NF1 基因(613113.0018)的框架移位突变。

In affected members of 2 families with spinal neurofibromas but no cafe-au-lait macules, Kaufmann et al. (2001) identified 2 different mutations in the NF1 gene (613113.0028 and 613113.0029, respectively). Both NF1 mutations caused a reduction in neurofibromin of approximately 50%, with no truncated protein present in the cells. The findings demonstrated that typical NF1 null mutations can result in a phenotype that is distinct from classic NF1, showing only a small spectrum of the NF1 symptoms, such as multiple spinal tumors, but not completely fitting the current clinical criteria for spinal NF.
Kaufmann 等人(2001 年)在两个患有脊髓神经纤维瘤但没有咖啡色斑痣的家族成员中发现了 NF1 基因的两种不同突变(分别为 613113.0028 和 613113.0029)。两种 NF1 基因突变均导致神经纤维色素减少约 50%,细胞中没有截短蛋白。研究结果表明,典型的 NF1 基因空突变可导致与典型 NF1 基因不同的表型,仅表现出一小部分 NF1 症状,如多发性脊髓肿瘤,但并不完全符合脊髓 NF 目前的临床标准。

Role in Cancer  在癌症中的作用

Desmoplastic neurotropic melanoma (DNM) is an uncommon melanoma subtype that shares morphologic characteristics with nerve sheath tumors. For that reason, Gutzmer et al. (2000) analyzed 15 DNMs and 20 melanomas without morphologic features of desmoplasia or neuroid differentiation (i.e., common melanomas) for LOH at the NF1 locus and flanking regions. Allelic loss was detected in 10 of 15 (67%) DNMs but in only 1 of 20 (5%) common melanomas. LOH was most frequently observed at marker IVS38, located in intron 38 of NF1. These data suggested a role for NF1 in the pathogenesis of DNM and supported the hypothesis that exon 37 may encode a functional domain.
脱鳞神经性黑色素瘤(DNM)是一种不常见的黑色素瘤亚型,它与神经鞘瘤具有相同的形态特征。因此,Gutzmer 等人(2000 年)分析了 15 例 DNM 和 20 例没有脱鳞或神经分化形态特征的黑色素瘤(即普通黑色素瘤),以检测 NF1 基因座和侧翼区域的 LOH。在15个DNM中的10个(67%)检测到了等位基因缺失,但在20个普通黑色素瘤中只有1个(5%)检测到了等位基因缺失。在位于 NF1 内含子 38 的标记 IVS38 上最常观察到 LOH。这些数据表明了 NF1 在 DNM 发病机制中的作用,并支持了 37 号外显子可能编码一个功能域的假设。

The Cancer Genome Atlas Research Network (2008) reported the interim integrative analysis of DNA copy number, gene expression, and DNA methylation aberrations in 206 glioblastomas and nucleotide sequence alterations in 91 of the 206 glioblastomas. The RTK/RAS/PI3K signaling pathway was altered in 88% of glioblastomas. NF1 was found to be an important gene in glioblastoma, with mutation or homozygous deletion of the NF1 gene present in 18% of tumors.
癌症基因组图谱研究网络(2008 年)报告了对 206 例胶质母细胞瘤的 DNA 拷贝数、基因表达和 DNA 甲基化畸变以及 206 例胶质母细胞瘤中 91 例的核苷酸序列改变的中期综合分析。88%的胶质母细胞瘤的RTK/RAS/PI3K信号通路发生了改变。研究发现,NF1是胶质母细胞瘤中的一个重要基因,18%的肿瘤中存在NF1基因突变或同源染色体缺失。


Animal Model   ▼ 动物模型

See 162200 for a discussion of animal models of neurofibromatosis type I.
有关 I 型神经纤维瘤病动物模型的讨论,请参见 162200。

Ruiz-Lozano and Chien (2003) commented on how it is possible to apply Cre-loxP technology to track the cardiac morphogenic signals mediated by neurofibromin. A growing list of mouse lines that express Cre in specific cardiovascular cell lineages was available.
Ruiz-Lozano 和 Chien(2003 年)评论了如何应用 Cre-loxP 技术追踪神经纤维蛋白介导的心脏形态发生信号。在特定心血管细胞系中表达 Cre 的小鼠品系越来越多。

Gene transcription may be regulated by remote enhancer or insulator regions through chromosome looping. Using a modification of chromosome conformation capture and fluorescence in situ hybridization, Ling et al. (2006) found that 1 allele of the Igf2 (147470)/H19 (103280) imprinting control region (ICR) on mouse chromosome 7 colocalized with 1 allele of Wsb1 (610091)/Nf1 on chromosome 17. Omission of CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF; 604167) or deletion of the maternal ICR abrogated this association and altered Wsb1/Nf1 gene expression. Ling et al. (2006) concluded that CTCF mediates an interchromosomal association, perhaps by directing distant DNA segments to a common transcription factory, and the data provided a model for long-range allele-specific associations between gene regions on different chromosomes that suggested a framework for DNA recombination and RNA trans-splicing.
基因转录可能通过染色体环状结构受到远端增强子或绝缘子区域的调控。Ling 等人(2006 年)利用染色体构象捕获和荧光原位杂交技术发现,小鼠 7 号染色体上 Igf2 ( 147470)/H19 ( 103280) 印记控制区(ICR)的一个等位基因与 17 号染色体上 Wsb1 ( 610091)/Nf1 的一个等位基因共定位。省略 CCCTC 结合因子(CTCF; 604167)或删除母体 ICR 可消除这种关联并改变 Wsb1/Nf1 基因的表达。Ling 等人(2006 年)认为,CTCF 介导了染色体间的关联,也许是通过将遥远的 DNA 片段导向一个共同的转录工厂,这些数据为不同染色体上基因区域之间的长程等位基因特异性关联提供了一个模型,为 DNA 重组和 RNA 转拼接提供了一个框架。

To investigate the function of NF1 in skeletal development, Kolanczyk et al. (2007) created mice with Nf1 knockout directed to undifferentiated mesenchymal cells of developing limbs. Inactivation of Nf1 in limbs resulted in bowing of the tibia, diminished growth, abnormal vascularization of skeletal tissues, and fusion of the hip joints and other joint abnormalities. Tibial bowing was caused by decreased stability of the cortical bone due to a high degree of porosity, decreased stiffness, and reduction in the mineral content, as well as hyperosteoidosis. Accordingly, cultured osteoblasts showed increased proliferation and decreased ability to differentiate and mineralize. The reduced growth in Nf1-knockout mice was due to reduced proliferation and differentiation of chondrocytes.
为了研究 NF1 在骨骼发育中的功能,Kolanczyk 等人(2007 年)在发育中的四肢未分化间充质细胞中敲除了 Nf1。四肢中的 Nf1 失活导致胫骨弯曲、生长减弱、骨骼组织血管化异常、髋关节融合和其他关节异常。胫骨弯曲的原因是皮质骨的稳定性因孔隙率高、硬度降低、矿物质含量减少以及骨质疏松而降低。相应地,培养的成骨细胞增殖增加,分化和矿化能力下降。Nf1基因敲除小鼠的生长减弱是由于软骨细胞的增殖和分化能力降低所致。

Lubeck et al. (2015) found that mice lacking both Nf1 and Rasa1 (139150) in T cells, but not those lacking either Nf1 or Rasa1 alone, developed T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma (see 613065) that originated at an early point in T-cell development and was dependent on activating mutations in Notch1 (190198). Lubeck et al. (2015) concluded that RASA1 and NF1 are co-tumor suppressors in the T-cell lineage.
Lubeck 等人(2015 年)发现,在 T 细胞中同时缺乏 Nf1 和 Rasa1 ( 139150) 的小鼠,而不是单独缺乏 Nf1 或 Rasa1 的小鼠,会患上 T 细胞急性淋巴细胞白血病/淋巴瘤(见 613065),这种白血病起源于 T 细胞发育的早期阶段,并依赖于 Notch1 ( 190198) 的激活突变。Lubeck 等人(2015 年)认为,RASA1 和 NF1 是 T 细胞系中的共同肿瘤抑制因子。


History   ▼ 历史

Gervasini et al. (2002) reported a direct tandem duplication of the NF1 gene identified in 17q11.2 by high-resolution FISH. FISH on stretched chromosomes with locus-specific probes revealed the duplication of the NF1 gene from the promoter to the 3-prime untranslated region (UTR), but with at least the absence of exon 22. Duplication was probably present in the human-chimpanzee-gorilla common ancestor, as demonstrated by the finding of the duplicated NF1 gene at orthologous chromosome loci. The authors suggested that the NF1 intrachromosomal duplication may contribute to the high whole-gene mutation rate by gene conversion. In contrast to the findings of Gervasini et al. (2002), however, Kehrer-Sawatzki et al. (2002) studied a female NF1 patient with reciprocal translocation t(17;22)(q11.2; q11.2) and determined that there is a single NF1 gene in the 17q11.2 region. Kehrer-Sawatzki and Messiaen (2003) analyzed another reciprocal translocation, a t(14;17)(q32;q11.2), described in a large family with NF1, which disrupted the NF1 gene (Messiaen et al., 2000) and again reported findings inconsistent with a duplication of the NF1 gene at 17q11.2 as proposed by Gervasini et al. (2002).
Gervasini 等人(2002 年)报告了通过高分辨率 FISH 在 17q11.2 发现的 NF1 基因的直接串联重复。使用位点特异性探针对拉伸染色体进行 FISH 检测发现,NF1 基因从启动子到 3-prime非翻译区(UTR)均有重复,但至少缺少第 22 号外显子。在人类-黑猩猩-大猩猩的共同祖先中很可能存在重复,在同源染色体位点上发现重复的 NF1 基因就证明了这一点。作者认为,NF1染色体内重复可能是基因转换导致高全基因突变率的原因之一。然而,与 Gervasini 等人(2002 年)的研究结果不同,Kehrer-Sawatzki 等人(2002 年)研究了一名患有互变 t(17;22)(q11.2;q11.2)的女性 NF1 患者,并确定在 17q11.2 区域存在一个 NF1 基因。Kehrer-Sawatzki和Messiaen(2003年)分析了另一个NF1大家族中出现的t(14;17)(q32;q11.2)互易位点,该互易位点破坏了NF1基因(Messiaen等人,2000年),并再次报告了与Gervasini等人(2002年)提出的NF1基因在17q11.2重复不一致的结果。


ALLELIC VARIANTS ( 46 Selected Examples):
▼ ALLELIC VARIANTS(46 个选例):

Table View   ClinVar
表格查看 ClinVar

.0001 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I
.0001 I 型神经纤维瘤病

NF1, ALU INS   NF1、ALU INS
   RCV000000360

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Wallace et al. (1991) demonstrated a de novo heterozygous Alu repetitive element insertion into an intron of the NF1 gene, which resulted in deletion of the downstream exon during splicing and consequently shifted the reading frame. The patient was an isolated case in his family. The insertion, 300-500 bp, began 44 bp upstream of exon 6. This previously undescribed mechanism of mutation indicated that Alu retrotransposition is an ongoing process in the human germline. Alu elements had been involved in the generation of disease mutation by recombination (e.g., in familial hypercholesterolemia (143890) and ADA deficiency) or point mutation (e.g., in gyrate atrophy of the choroid and retina 258870; 613349.0023), but not as a new element.
Wallace 等人(1991 年)在一名 I 型神经纤维瘤病(NF1;162200)患者身上发现,在 NF1 基因的一个内含子中插入了一个新的杂合性 Alu 重复元件,这导致在剪接过程中删除了下游外显子,从而移动了阅读框。该患者是其家族中的一个孤立病例。插入物为 300-500 bp,位于第 6 号外显子上游 44 bp 处。这种以前从未描述过的突变机制表明,Alu逆转录是人类种系中一个持续的过程。Alu元件曾通过重组(如家族性高胆固醇血症(143890)和ADA缺乏症)或点突变(如脉络膜和视网膜回旋萎缩258870;613349.0023)参与疾病突变的产生,但并不是作为一种新元件。


.0002 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I
.0002 I 型神经纤维瘤病

NF1, 5-BP DEL   NF1、5-BP DEL
  
RCV000000361

In 2 patients with neurofibromatosis type I (162200), a 35-year-old man and his daughter, Stark et al. (1991) demonstrated a 5-bp deletion (CCACC or CACCT) and an adjacent transversion, located about 500 bp downstream from the region that codes for a functional domain of the NF1 gene product. The mutation was demonstrable by heteroduplex analysis. The deletion removed the proximal half of a small potential stem-loop and interrupted the reading frame in exon 1. A severely truncated protein with a grossly altered carboxy terminus lacking one-third of its sequence was the predicted consequence. Stark et al. (1992) found that both alleles were expressed in primary cultures of neurofibroma cells and melanocytes from a cafe-au-lait macule of the proband, thus excluding loss of heterozygosity. The authors used the 5-bp deletion for the presymptomatic diagnosis of the 18-month-old third son of the proband.
Stark 等人(1991 年)在两名神经纤维瘤病 I 型(162200)患者(一名 35 岁的男子和他的女儿)身上发现了一个 5 bp 的缺失(CCACC 或 CACCT)和一个相邻的转换,位于编码 NF1 基因产品功能域的区域下游约 500 bp 处。这种突变可通过杂合双工分析得到证实。该缺失移除了一个小的潜在茎环的近半部分,并中断了外显子 1 的阅读框。预计结果是产生一种严重截短的蛋白质,其羧基末端发生了严重改变,缺少三分之一的序列。Stark 等人(1992 年)发现,两个等位基因在神经纤维瘤细胞的原代培养物中和来自疑似患者咖啡色斑块的黑色素细胞中都有表达,因此排除了杂合性缺失的可能。作者利用 5-bp 缺失对 proband 18 个月大的第三个儿子进行了无症状诊断。


.0003 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, LEU348PRO
  
RCV000000362...

Cawthon et al. (1990) identified point mutations in a 4-kb sequence of the transcript of the NF1 gene at a translocation breakpoint associated with neurofibromatosis type I (162200). One mutant allele contained a T-to-C transition that caused a leu348-to-pro (L348P) substitution, and the second harbored a C-to-T insertion that changed an arg365 to a stop codon (R365X; 613113.0004).


.0004 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, ARG365TER
  
RCV000000363

Independently, Cawthon et al. (1990) and Estivill et al. (1991) identified a new mutation in exon 4 of the NF1 gene, a 1087C-T transition (numbering of Cawthon et al., 1990), resulting in an arg365-to-ter (R365X) substitution, in patients with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200). Although a different numbering system was used, this is the same mutation as that found by Valero et al. (1994) and designated 5242C-T in exon 29. They proposed that this site, in a CpG residue, is a hotspot for mutation in the NF1 gene.


.0005 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, LYS1423GLU
  
RCV000000364...

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200) and affected members of his family, Li et al. (1992) found an AAG-to-GAG transition at codon 1423 in the NF1 gene, resulting in the substitution of glutamic acid for lysine (K1423E).

The same mutation or a mutation in the same codon leading to substitution of glutamine for lysine through an A-to-C transversion was also observed by Li et al. (1992) as a somatic mutation in adenocarcinoma of the colon, myelodysplastic syndrome, and anaplastic astrocytoma.


.0006 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, 1-BP INS, 5662C
  
RCV000000365

In 2 unrelated patients with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Upadhyaya et al. (1992) found insertion of a cytosine within codon 1818 of the NF1 gene that changed the reading frame and resulted in 23 altered amino acids prior to the inappropriate introduction of a stop codon at amino acid 1841. The insertion created a recognition site for enzyme MnlI. (The authors incorrectly stated in their abstract and the legend of their Figure 3 that there was a nucleotide insertion at 'codon 5662.' The nucleotide insertion at residue 5662 occurs within codon 1818 in their cDNA clone of NF1, as correctly represented in the sequence shown in their Figure 3.)


.0007 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, 1-BP INS, FS1841TER
  
RCV000000366

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Upadhyaya et al. (1992) found an insertion of thymidine in codon 1823, resulting in a shift of the reading frame, the generation of 18 amino acids different from those of the normal protein, and a gene product that terminated prematurely at amino acid 1840 by the creation of a stop codon at 1841.


.0008 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, LEU2143MET
  
RCV000000367

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Upadhyaya et al. (1992) found a heterozygous 6639C-A transversion in the NF1 gene, resulting in a leu2143-to-met (L2143M) substitution.


.0009 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, TYR2213ASN
  
RCV000000368

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Upadhyaya et al. (1992) found a heterozygous 6724T-G transversion in the NF1 gene, resulting in a tyr2213-to-asn (Y2213N) substitution.


.0010 WATSON SYNDROME

NF1, 42-BP DUP
   RCV000000369

In a family in which Watson syndrome (WTSN; 193520) had occurred in 3 generations, Tassabehji et al. (1993) demonstrated an almost perfect in-frame tandem duplication of 42 bases in exon 28 of the NF1 gene. Unlike the mutations previously described in classic NF1 which result predominantly in null alleles, the mutation in this family would be expected to result in a mutant neurofibromin product. The affected mother had multiple cafe-au-lait patches, freckling in the axillary and groin, low-set posteriorly rotated ears, a squint, and an IQ of 56. She had no Lisch nodules or neurofibromata. A daughter, aged 3.5 years, had multiple cafe-au-lait spots, mild pectus carinatum, hypertelorism with epicanthic folds, a squint, low-set posteriorly rotated ears, and moderate global developmental delay. Her twin brother had ptosis, mild cubitus valgus, bilateral undescended testes, and mild pulmonic valvular stenosis by echocardiography. Neither child had Lisch nodules or neurofibromata.


.0011 WATSON SYNDROME

NF1, 80-KB DEL
   RCV000000370

Upadhyaya et al. (1992) found an 80-kb deletion at the NF1 locus in a patient with Watson syndrome (WTSN; 193520).


.0012 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, ARG1947TER
  
RCV000000371...

A C-to-T transition changing arginine-1947 to a stop codon (R1947X) in the NF1 gene has been described in multiple Caucasian and Japanese families with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), suggesting that this codon, CGA, is a hotspot for mutation, presumably because it contains a CpG dinucleotide. (Numbering of codons is based on Marchuk et al. (1991).) The mutation was described in 3 unrelated Caucasians (Ainsworth et al., 1993; Cawthon et al., 1990; Estivill et al., 1991); at least 2 of these cases were sporadic. Horiuchi et al. (1994) reported the same mutation in 2 unrelated familial cases of NF1. That these represented independent mutations was indicated by the fact that in the 2 families the affected individuals differed with regard to a polymorphism located within the NF1 gene. The frequency of the arg1947-to-ter mutation may be as high as 8% in Japanese and at least 1% in Caucasians. Studying one of the patients with the arg1947-to-ter mutation, Horiuchi et al. (1994) showed that both the normal and the mutant allele were transcribed in a lymphoblastoid cell line.

Heim et al. (1994) stated that the R1947X mutation had been reported in 6 unrelated patients with NF1.

Lazaro et al. (1995) presented 2 further cases of the R1947X mutation in the NF1 gene. They stated that a total of 9 cases of the R1947X mutation had been reported, giving a frequency of about 2%. They developed an allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization assay for the efficient screening of a large number of samples for this relatively common recurrent mutation.

In a sample of 56 unrelated Korean patients with NF1, Park et al. (2000) identified 1 with the R1947X mutation.


.0013 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, IVS18DS, G-A, +1
  
RCV000000373...

Purandare et al. (1995) identified a G-to-A transition at position +1 of intron 18 of the NF1 gene in a 41-year-old Caucasian female in whom the diagnosis of neurofibromatosis (NF1; 162200) was first made at the age of 28 years when she was admitted to hospital for a grand mal seizure. A son was also affected. The mutation resulted in skipping of exon 18 which did not cause a shift in the reading frame but resulted in an in-frame loss of 123 nucleotides from the mRNA and the corresponding 41 amino acids from the protein. Purandare et al. (1995) referred to 3 previously reported splice donor site mutations in the NF1 gene.


.0014 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, 2-BP DEL, 1541AG
  
RCV000000374...

Robinson et al. (1996) described a recurrent 2-bp deletion (1541delAG) in exon 10c of the NF1 gene in 2 unrelated patients with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200): one sporadic and one familial case.


.0015 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, MET1035ARG
  
RCV000000375

Wu et al. (1996) found a de novo met1035-to-arg (M1035R) missense mutation resulting from a T-to-G transversion in exon 18 of the NF1 gene in a 32-year-old woman with a prior diagnosis of LEOPARD syndrome (151100), who was found to have neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200). At birth, a heart murmur was detected resulting from subvalvular muscular aortic stenosis and valvular aortic stenosis. The skin showed multiple dark lentigines together with a few larger cafe-au-lait patches. The same lentigines were present in the armpits and groin and were not raised. The patient attended a special school for children with mild mental retardation. At the age of 21 years, mitral insufficiency was demonstrated resulting from a double orifice mitral valve. The patient had macrocrania (head circumference 58 cm), apparent hypertelorism, and a coarse face with broad neck. Neurofibromas were not present at the age of 32, and no Lisch nodules were seen by slit-lamp examination. The mutation was absent in the parents, who were clinically normal.


.0016 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, ARG1391SER
  
RCV000000376...

Upadhyaya et al. (1997) identified 14 novel mutations in the GAP-related domain of neurofibromin in patients with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200). One of these mutations was a change at nucleotide 4173 from A to T, changing codon 1391 from AGA (arg) to AGT (ser) (R1391S). The effect of this R1391S missense mutation was studied by in vitro expression of a site-directed mutant and by GAP activity assay. The mutant protein was found to be some 300-fold less active than wildtype NF1 protein.


.0017 REMOVED FROM DATABASE


.0018 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, FAMILIAL SPINAL

NF1, 1-BP INS, 8042A
  
RCV000000377

In 5 affected members of a family with spinal neurofibromatosis with cafe-au-lait macules (162210), Ars et al. (1998) identified a 1-bp insertion (8042insA) in exon 46 of the NF1 gene. The mutation was predicted to result in a truncated protein.


.0019 LEUKEMIA, JUVENILE MYELOMONOCYTIC

NF1, TRP1538TER
  
RCV000000378...

Among 20 children with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML; 607785), Side et al. (1998) found 3 with truncating mutations in the NF1 gene. One of the children, a 3-year-old boy, had a G-to-A transition at nucleotide 4614, which converted codon 1538 from tryptophan to stop in exon 27a (W1538X).


.0020 LEUKEMIA, JUVENILE MYELOMONOCYTIC

NF1, IVS34, G-A, +18
   RCV000000379

In a 19-month-old boy with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML/Mo7; 607785), Side et al. (1998) found in cloned cDNA aberrant splicing resulting in a shift in the reading frame. Genomic DNA showed an alteration (6579,G-A,+18) in the splice donor consensus sequence flanking exon 34. This mutation introduced an additional 17 nucleotides containing a novel BglI restriction enzyme site into the patient's cDNA. Side et al. (1998) identified this restriction site in amplified cDNA derived from the patient's EBV cell line RNA, thus confirming that this mutation existed in the germline. Furthermore, loss of heterozygosity was demonstrated, indicating inactivation of another NF1 allele.


.0021 LEUKEMIA, JUVENILE MYELOMONOCYTIC

NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I, INCLUDED
NF1, IVS11, A-G, -8
  
RCV000000380...

In a 6-month-old boy with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML; 607785), Side et al. (1998) described a splice mutation in the NF1 gene. Cloned cDNA showed abnormal splicing of 7 nucleotides between exons 10c and 11. The authors had previously found the same mutation in a child with familial NF1 and myelodysplasia syndrome (Side et al. (1997)); genomic DNA sequence showed an abnormal splice acceptor sequence upstream of exon 11 (1642-8A-G) creating a cryptic splice site and consequent frameshift and premature stop codon at codon 555.


.0022 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, ARG1276PRO
  
RCV000000381...

In a family with a classic multisymptomatic NF1 phenotype (162200), including a malignant schwannoma, Klose et al. (1998) found an arg1276-to-pro (R1276P) mutation in the arginine finger of the GAP-related domain (GRD) of the neurofibromin gene, resulting in disruption of the most essential catalytic element for Ras-GAP activity. Klose et al. (1998) presented data demonstrating that the R1276P mutation, unlike previously reported missense mutations of the GRD region, did not impair the secondary and tertiary protein structure. It neither reduced the level of cellular neurofibromin nor influenced its binding to Ras substantially, but it did completely disable GAP activity. The findings provided direct evidence that failure of neurofibromin GAP activity is a critical element in NF1 pathogenesis. The findings suggested that therapeutic approaches aimed at the reduction of the Ras-GTP levels in neural crest-derived cells can be expected to relieve most of the NF1 symptoms. The proband was the first child of unaffected, nonconsanguineous parents. She developed multiple cafe-au-lait spots within the first year of life. Her language and motor development were mildly retarded, and she complained of incoordination throughout life. Around puberty, multiple cutaneous neurofibromas developed which worsened at the time of each of her 3 pregnancies. At the age of 31 years, routine MRI of the brain revealed multiple areas of increased T2 signal intensity in the midbrain and a small optic glioma. Because of recurrent paresthesias in her left leg, an MRI scan of the spine was done 2 years later which revealed multiple schwannomas within the vertebral foramina. The largest tumor in the lumbar region, with a volume of approximately 8 ml, was surgically removed. Histologically, there was no evidence of malignancy at that time. Eight months later, the patient suffered a relapse with rapid tumor growth. At the time of reoperation, the retroperitoneal tumor had reached a volume of 800 ml and showed numerous necrotic and anaplastic areas with a proliferation rate up to 60%. The patient died of widespread metastatic disease at the age of 34 years. Her 3 male children, ages 4, 8, and 12 years, all fulfilled the NF1 diagnostic criteria. The 2 elder sons were macrocephalic. Language and motor development of all children was retarded to a similar extent and on the same time scale as in their mother. A cranial MRI scan in the 2 elder brothers showed increased T2 signal intensities similar to those in their mother.


.0023 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, TYR489CYS
  
RCV000000382...

Among the 9 NF1 exon 10b mutations identified by Messiaen et al. (1999) in 232 unrelated patients with neurofibromatosis type I (162200), 2 were recurrent: an A-to-G transition at nucleotide 1466, resulting in a tyr489-to-cys substitution (Y489C), and a T-to-C transition at nucleotide 1523, resulting in a leu508-to-pro substitution (L508P; 613113.0024). The Y489C mutation caused skipping of the last 62 nucleotides of exon 10b, while the L508P mutation was undetectable by the protein truncation test.


.0024 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, LEU508PRO
  
RCV000000383

For discussion of the leu508-to-pro (L508P) mutation in the NF1 gene that was found in compound heterozygous state in patients with neurofibromatosis I (162200) by Messiaen et al. (1999), see 613113.0023.


.0025 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, IVS9DS, G-A, +1
  
RCV000000384...

In a patient with type I neurofibromatosis (NF1; 162200), Eisenbarth et al. (2000) identified a germline G-to-A transition at nucleotide 1260+1, the splice donor site of intron 9 of the NF1 gene, leading to the inclusion of 13 bp of intervening sequence into the NF1 messenger. The mutant allele was present in all tissues tested. In a neurofibroma from this patient, an additional C-to-T transition at nucleotide 4021 (Q1341X; 613113.0026), a presumed 'second hit' somatic mutation, was identified. Another neurofibroma from the same patient showed a C-to-T transition at nucleotide 4084 (R1362X; 613113.0027), a presumed further 'second hit' somatic mutation. Both somatic mutations led to premature stop codons in the NF1 message.


.0026 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I, SOMATIC

NF1, GLN1341TER
  
RCV000000385...

For discussion of the gln1341-to-ter (Q1341X) mutation in the NF1 gene that was found in a patient with type I neurofibromatosis (NF1; 162200) by Eisenbarth et al. (2000), see 613113.0025.


.0027 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I, SOMATIC

NF1, ARG1362TER
  
RCV000000372...

For discussion of the arg1362-to-ter (R1362X) mutation in the NF1 gene that was found in a patient with type I neurofibromatosis (NF1; 162200) by Eisenbarth et al. (2000), see 613113.0025.


.0028 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, FAMILIAL SPINAL

NF1, LEU2067PRO
  
RCV000000386...

In a patient with spinal neurofibromatosis but without cafe-au-lait macules (162210), Kaufmann et al. (2001) identified a leu2067-to-pro (L2067P) mutation in exon 33 of the NF1 gene. Her clinically unaffected 61-year-old father had the same NF1 mutation in his blood cells. Additional molecular investigations to exclude mosaicism were not feasible and additional clinical investigations through MRI scans could not be performed. The L2067P mutation yielded an unstable product of approximately 50% normal neurofibromin levels, indicating functional haploinsufficiency.


.0029 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, FAMILIAL SPINAL, INCLUDED
NF1, IVS31AS, A-G, -5
  
RCV000000387...

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Fahsold et al. (2000) identified an A-to-G transition in the NF1 gene splice acceptor site of exon 31 (IVS31-5A-G), resulting in the addition of 4 bases to exon 32 and a premature stop codon at amino acid 1995.

In affected members of a family with spinal neurofibromatosis without cafe-au-lait macules (162210), Kaufmann et al. (2001) identified the exon 31 splice site mutation. Noting that the same mutation had been reported in a patient with classic NF1, the authors concluded that a modifying gene may compensate for some of the effects of neurofibromin deficiency. The splice site NF1 mutation resulted in instability of the neurofibromin protein.


.0030 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, DEL
   RCV000000389

Upadhyaya et al. (2003) described a Portuguese family in which 3 members had clinical features of neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200) and each had a different underlying defect in the NF1 gene. A 12-year-old boy who had multiple cafe-au-lait spots on his trunk and legs as well as developmental delay had a heterozygous 1.5-Mb deletion including the entire NF1 gene. The mutation was associated with the maternally derived chromosomal haplotype. His 10-year-old brother, who exhibited multiple cafe-au-lait spots and macrocephaly but whose development was within the normal range, was heterozygous for a CGA-to-TGA transition in exon 22 of the NF1 gene, resulting in an arg1241-to-ter mutation (613113.0031). This mutation had previously been described; its recurrence was thought to have been mediated by 5-methylcytosine deamination because it occurred in a hypermutable CpG dinucleotide. The brothers' 26-year-old female first cousin once removed (a first cousin of their father) exhibited multiple cafe-au-lait spots, bilateral Lisch nodules, and multiple dermal neurofibromas. She also showed severe scoliosis and several plexiform neurofibromas in the clavicular region, but her development was within the normal range. She was found to carry a frameshift mutation, 5406insT (613113.0032), in exon 29 of the NF1 gene. None of the parents had any clinical evidence of NF1 and none had a mutation in the NF1 gene. There was also no evidence of mosaicism. Upadhyaya et al. (2003) speculated about the mechanism of this unusual situation.


.0031 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, ARG1241TER
  
RCV000000390...

For discussion of the arg1241-to-ter (R1241X) mutation in the NF1 gene that was found in heterozygous state in 1 of 3 members of a family with clinical features of neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200) by Upadhyaya et al. (2003), see 613113.0030.

Fahsold et al. (2000) described a CGA-to-TGA transition in the NF1 gene, resulting in an R1241X mutation, as the cause of neurofibromatosis type I.


.0032 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, 1-BP INS, 5406T
  
RCV000000391...

For discussion of the 1-bp insertion (5406insT) in the NF1 gene that was found in heterozygous state in 1 of 3 members of a family with clinical features of neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200) by Upadhyaya et al. (2003), see 613113.0030.


.0033 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS-NOONAN SYNDROME

WATSON SYNDROME, INCLUDED
NF1, 3-BP DEL, 2970AAT
  
RCV000000392...

Carey et al. (1997) described a 3-bp deletion in exon 17 of the NF1 gene in affected members of a family with neurofibromatosis-Noonan syndrome (NFNS; 601321). The 2970delAAT mutation resulted in deletion of met991. The clinical features of the 3 subjects were tabulated by De Luca et al. (2005). Stevenson et al. (2006) reported a follow-up of this family.

Upadhyaya et al. (2007) reported this mutation in 47 affected individuals from 21 unrelated families with a similar phenotype, lacking cutaneous neurofibromas or clinically obvious plexiform neurofibromas. One of the families had been reported by Stevenson et al. (2006); another was reported by Castle et al. (2003) and had a diagnosis of Watson syndrome (WTSN; 193520). The in-frame 3-bp deletion in exon 17 was predicted to result in the loss of 1 of 2 adjacent methionines, either codon 991 or codon 992, in conjunction with a silent ACA-to-ACG change of codon 990. These 2 methionine residues are located in a highly conserved region of neurofibromin and are expected, therefore, to have a functional role in the protein. This was said to have been the first study to correlate a specific small mutation of the NF1 gene with the expression of a particular clinical phenotype.

Koczkowska et al. (2019) performed a standardized phenotypic assessment on 135 individuals from 103 unrelated families carrying the NF1 p.Met992del mutation. None of the individuals had externally visible plexiform or histopathologically confirmed cutaneous or subcutaneous neurofibromas. None had optic gliomas or symptomatic spinal neurofibromas; however, 4.8% of individuals had nonoptic brain tumors, mostly low-grade and asymptomatic, and 38.8% had cognitive impairment/learning disabilities. Of 119 patients evaluated, 15 (12.6%) had Noonan-like features. The authors concluded that NF patients carrying this variant have a mild NF1 phenotype lacking clinically suspected plexiform, cutaneous, or subcutaneous neurofibromas. However, learning difficulties are clearly part of the phenotypic presentation.


.0034 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS-NOONAN SYNDROME

NF1, 3-BP DEL, 4312GAA
  
RCV000000394...

In a patient with neurofibromatosis-Noonan syndrome (NFNS; 601321), Baralle et al. (2003) identified a 3-bp deletion, 4312delGAA, in exon 25 of the NF1 gene. The patient was a 6-year-old boy with more than 6 cafe-au-lait macules. There were no other features of neurofibromatosis type I, but his mother had a single cafe-au-lait macule and Lisch nodules, low hairline, and short neck. He had ptosis, epicanthal folds, low posterior hairline, and low-set ears. On echocardiogram he had pulmonic stenosis. No neurofibromas were present.


.0035 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS-NOONAN SYNDROME

NF1, 2-BP INS, 4095TG
  
RCV000000395

In a patient with neurofibromatosis-Noonan syndrome (NFNS; 601321), Baralle et al. (2003) identified a 2-bp insertion, 4095insTG, in exon 23-2 of the NF1 gene. The patient was a 20-year-old man with 7 cafe-au-lait macules, axillary freckling, 10 neurofibromas, Lisch nodules, and scoliosis with a structural cervical vertebral abnormality. He had downslanting palpebral fissures, ptosis, a short, broad neck, widely spaced nipples, and an atrial septal defect. He was of short stature and needed extra help in mainstream school. There was no family history of similar findings.


.0036 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS TYPE 1

NF1, 20075G-A, 20076C-A
  
RCV000000396

In a patient with severe neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Colapietro et al. (2003) found a G-to-A transition and a C-to-A transversion at nucleotide positions 57 and 58, respectively, of the 154-bp long NF1 exon 7, neither of which was present in the proband's parents or 50 healthy controls. RT-PCR analysis showed the expected fragment from exon 4b to 8 together with a shortened one with in-frame skipping of exon 7. Direct sequencing of genomic DNA revealed 2 exonic heterozygous changes at nucleotides 20075 (G-A transition) and 20076 (C-A transversion), which belong to contiguous codons. The first substitution occurred in the third base of the codon, changing it from CAG to CAA, both encoding glutamine (Q315Q); the second changed the CTG codon for leucine to the ATG codon for methionine (L316M). The use of previously established sequence matrices for the scoring of putative ESE motifs showed that the adjacent silent and missense mutations were located within highly conserved overlapping stretches of 7 nucleotides with a close similarity to the ESE-specific consensus sequences recognized by the SC35 (600813) and SF2/ASF (600812) arginine/serine-rich (SR) proteins. The combined occurrence of both consecutive alterations decreased the motif score for both SR proteins below their threshold levels. As the aberrant transcript was consistently expressed, a protein lacking 58 amino acids was predicted. Thus, the contiguous internal exon 7 mutations appear to have caused exon 7 skipping as a result of the missplicing caused by abrogation of functional ESEs (see Cartegni et al. (2002) and Fairbrother et al. (2002)). The male proband in the study of Colapietro et al. (2003) was the third child of healthy unrelated parents. At the age of 1 year, he underwent uronephrectomy because of right renal dysplasia. At the age of 3 years, an optic glioma was identified and surgically excised. The diagnosis of NF1 was made when he was 9 years old on the basis of the presence of cafe-au-lait spots, optic glioma, and Lisch nodules of the iris. Cerebral MRI at the age of 11 years revealed multiple hamartomas and a right hemisphere cerebral venous angioma. The patient showed borderline mental retardation, a height in the 10th percentile, and an occipitofrontal head circumference in the 97th percentile. At the age of 20 years, he showed macrocephaly, numerous cafe-au-lait spots, small cutaneous neurofibromas, a plexiform neck neurofibroma, and axillary and inguinal freckling. Scoliosis, winged scapulae, and bilateral genu valgum were also present.


.0037 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, 1-BP DEL, 3775T
  
RCV000000397

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Maris et al. (2002) identified a 1-bp deletion in the NF1 gene, 3775delT. The mutation was not present in the patient's parents.

Mosse et al. (2004) showed that the patient originally described by Maris et al. (2002) also had neuroblastoma (256700) and Hirschsprung disease (142623), which were caused by a 1-bp deletion in the PHOX2B gene (676delG; 603851.0007).


.0038 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, FAMILIAL SPINAL, INCLUDED
NF1, LEU357PRO
  
RCV000000398...

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Fahsold et al. (2000) identified a 1070T-C transition in exon 8 of the NF1 gene, resulting in a leu357-to-pro (L357P) substitution.

In 7 affected members of a family with spinal neurofibromatosis (162210) originally reported by Poyhonen et al. (1997), Messiaen et al. (2003) identified the L357P mutation. The mutation was not detected in 200 normal chromosomes.


.0039 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, FAMILIAL SPINAL

NF1, IVS39DS, A-C, +3
  
RCV000000400

In affected members of a family with spinal neurofibromatosis (NF1; 162210) originally reported by Pulst et al. (1991), Messiaen et al. (2003) identified an A-to-C transversion at position +3 of the donor splice site of exon 39 of the NF1 gene (7126+3A-C), resulting in the skipping of exon 39.


.0040 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, 1-BP DEL, 4071C
   RCV000000401

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200) who had onset of neurofibromatous neuropathy at the age of 42 years, Ferner et al. (2004) identified a 1-bp deletion (4071delC) in exon 23.2 of the NF1 gene, resulting in a premature stop codon. The deletion was predicted to generate a truncated neurofibromin of 1,383 amino acids. Neuroimaging studies showed the presence of multiple spinal nerve root neurofibromas. A high-grade malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor (MPNST) had been removed from the left iliac fossa previously, with no recurrence. Benign flexiform neurofibroma was present in the left abdominal wall.


.0041 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, LEU1243PRO
  
RCV000000402...

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200) who had onset of neurofibromatous neuropathy at the age of 17 years, Ferner et al. (2004) identified a 1243T-C transition in the NF1 gene, resulting in a leu1243-to-pro (L1243P) substitution.


.0042 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, GLU1904TER
  
RCV000000403

By cDNA-based mutation detection analysis, Zatkova et al. (2004) studied 7 nonsense or missense alleles of NF1 that caused exon skipping and showed that disruption of exonic splicing enhancer (ESE) elements was responsible. One of the 7 mutations was a novel nonsense mutation, a 5719G-T transversion, resulting in a glu1904-to-ter (G1904X) substitution in exon 30. The phenotype was neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200).


.0043 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, LEU844ARG
  
RCV000000404

Bertola et al. (2005) described a 14-year-old girl with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), caused by a de novo mutation in the NF1 gene, and Noonan syndrome (163950), caused by a mutation in the PTPN11 gene (176876.0023) inherited from her father. The NF1 mutation was a 2531A-G transition resulting in a leu844-to-arg substitution. The proband had pulmonary stenosis and aortic coarctation requiring surgery and also had a pilocytic astrocytoma in the suprasellar region involving the optic chiasm and forming the third ventricle. She had cafe-au-lait spots and axillary freckling typical of neurofibromatosis and marked hypertelorism characteristic of Noonan syndrome.


.0044 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, IVS27DS, G-C, +1
  
RCV000000405...

In a mother and son with a mild form of neurofibromatosis I (NF1; 162200), Thiel et al. (2009) identified a heterozygous mutation (4661+1G-C) in intron 27 of the NF1 gene, resulting in the skipping of exon 27a and potentially affecting the GAP-related domain. Both patients had cafe-au-lait spots and mild myopia, but no neurofibromas, Lisch nodules, or optic gliomas. The daughter of the mother, who also carried the NF1 mutation, was found to be compound heterozygous with a mutation in the PTPN11 gene (T2I; 176876.0027). In addition to features of neurofibromatosis I, she also had features of Noonan syndrome (163950), including hypertelorism, low-set ears, poor growth, sternal deformity, valvular pulmonic stenosis, and delayed development. The PTPN11 mutation was predicted to destabilize the inactive form of PTPN11, resulting in increased basal activity and a gain of function. The girl also developed bilateral optic gliomas before age 2 years, which may be explained by an additive effect of both the NF1 and PTPN11 mutations on the Ras pathway. Compound heterozygosity for mutations in NF1 and PTPN11 were also reported by Bertola et al. (2005) in a patient with a combination of neurofibromatosis I and Noonan syndrome.


.0045 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS-NOONAN SYNDROME

NF1, LEU1390PHE
  
RCV000023983...

In affected members of a 5-generation family with neurofibromatosis-Noonan syndrome (NFNS; 601321), Nystrom et al. (2009) identified a heterozygous 4168C-T transition in exon 24 of the NF1 gene, resulting in a leu1390-to-phe (L1390F) substitution in the highly conserved GAP-related domain. The family was originally reported by Ahlbom et al. (1995) as having Noonan syndrome based on dysmorphic facial features, short stature, pulmonary stenosis, and short neck. Upon reevaluation, Nystrom et al. (2009) found that several family members had cafe-au-lait spots, axillary freckling, Lisch nodules, and multiple nevi, consistent with NF1, but that all family members lacked dermal and superficial plexiform neurofibromas. The authors concluded that the clinical diagnosis was consistent with NFNS. Nystrom et al. (2009) postulated that the L1390F mutation resulted in impaired GTPase activity.


.0046 NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, ARG192TER
  
RCV000033171...

In a girl with aniridia, microphthalmia, microcephaly, and cafe-au-lait macules, Henderson et al. (2007) identified heterozygosity for a 574C-T transition in exon 4b of the NF1 gene, resulting in an arg192-to-ter (R192X) substitution, as well as heterozygous mutations in the PAX6 (R38W; 607108.0026) and OTX2 (Y179X; 600037.0004) genes. Her mother, who carried the NF1 and PAX6 mutations, had NF1 (162200) with the typical eye defects of retinal fibroma, optic nerve glioma, and gross Lisch nodules on the iris; in addition, although her eyes were of normal size, she had eyes were of normal size, she had small corneas, and also had cataracts, optic nerve hypoplasia, nystagmus, and mild iris stromal hypoplasia with normal-sized pupils. The proband's father, who had multiple ocular defects (MCOPS5; 610125), had previously been studied by Ragge et al. (2005) and was heterozygous for the OTX2 nonsense mutation. Henderson et al. (2007) noted that the proband's phenotype was surprisingly mild, given that mutations in PAX6, OTX2, or NF1 can cause a variety of severe developmental defects.


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Ada Hamosh - updated : 03/04/2020
Paul J. Converse - updated : 4/29/2016
Paul J. Converse - updated : 3/3/2016
Marla J. F. O'Neill - updated : 2/22/2013
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 12/23/2010
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 11/8/2010
George E. Tiller - updated : 6/23/2010
Patricia A. Hartz - updated : 3/18/2010
Creation Date:
Carol A. Bocchini : 11/6/2009
alopez : 05/01/2024
carol : 02/22/2022
alopez : 03/04/2020
carol : 05/15/2019
carol : 10/05/2018
mgross : 03/20/2017
joanna : 08/04/2016
joanna : 07/01/2016
mgross : 4/29/2016
carol : 3/4/2016
mgross : 3/3/2016
carol : 8/18/2015
mcolton : 8/11/2015
carol : 10/1/2013
joanna : 8/5/2013
carol : 4/3/2013
carol : 2/22/2013
carol : 1/9/2013
terry : 11/13/2012
carol : 3/16/2012
wwang : 1/10/2011
ckniffin : 12/23/2010
wwang : 11/12/2010
ckniffin : 11/8/2010
wwang : 7/1/2010
terry : 6/23/2010
carol : 5/25/2010
alopez : 4/30/2010
carol : 4/9/2010
mgross : 3/18/2010
terry : 3/18/2010
carol : 12/1/2009
terry : 11/24/2009
carol : 11/23/2009
ckniffin : 11/17/2009
ckniffin : 11/17/2009
terry : 11/9/2009
terry : 11/9/2009
carol : 11/6/2009

* 613113

NEUROFIBROMIN 1; NF1


Alternative titles; symbols

NEUROFIBROMIN


HGNC Approved Gene Symbol: NF1

SNOMEDCT: 1003465006, 128832006, 277587001, 403820003, 445227008, 715344006, 92824003;   ICD10CM: C93.3, C93.30, Q85.01;   ICD9CM: 237.71;  


Cytogenetic location: 17q11.2   Genomic coordinates (GRCh38) : 17:31,094,927-31,377,677 (from NCBI)


Gene-Phenotype Relationships

Location Phenotype Phenotype
MIM number
Inheritance Phenotype
mapping key
17q11.2 Leukemia, juvenile myelomonocytic 607785 Autosomal dominant; Somatic mutation 3
Neurofibromatosis-Noonan syndrome 601321 Autosomal dominant 3
Neurofibromatosis, familial spinal 162210 Autosomal dominant 3
Neurofibromatosis, type 1 162200 Autosomal dominant 3
Watson syndrome 193520 Autosomal dominant 3

TEXT

Description

The NF1 gene encodes neurofibromin, a cytoplasmic protein that is predominantly expressed in neurons, Schwann cells, oligodendrocytes, and leukocytes. It is a multidomain molecule with the capacity to regulate several intracellular processes, including the RAS (see 190020)-cyclic AMP pathway, the ERK (600997)/MAP (see 600178) kinase cascade, adenylyl cyclase, and cytoskeletal assembly (summary by Trovo-Marqui and Tajara, 2006).


Cloning and Expression

Buchberg et al. (1990) sequenced a portion of the murine NF1 gene and showed that the predicted amino acid sequence is nearly the same as the corresponding region of the human NF1 gene product. Computer searches identified homology between the mouse NF1 gene and the Ira1 and Ira2 genes identified in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which negatively regulate the RAS-cyclic AMP pathway. RAS proteins are involved in the control of proliferation and differentiation in mammalian cells. Their activity is modulated by their ability to bind and hydrolyze guanine nucleotides. GTP-binding activates RAS, whereas GTP hydrolysis inactivates RAS. Mutant forms of RAS found in human tumors have greatly decreased GTPase activity, resulting in accumulation of RAS in the GTP-bound active form.

Xu et al. (1990) extended the known open reading frame of the human NF1 gene by cDNA walking and sequencing. The new sequence predicted 2,485 amino acids of the NF1 peptide. A 360-residue region showed significant similarity to the catalytic domains of both human and bovine GTPase-activating protein (GAP, or RASA1; 139150). Xu et al. (1990) suggested that NF1 encodes a cytoplasmic GAP-like protein that may be involved in the control of cell growth by interacting with proteins such as the RAS gene product.

Marchuk et al. (1991) reported an extensive cDNA walk resulting in the cloning of the complete coding region of the NF1 transcript. Analysis of the sequences revealed an open reading frame of 2,818 amino acids, although alternatively spliced products may code for different protein isoforms.

To study the NF1 gene product, Gutmann et al. (1991) raised antibodies against both fusion proteins and synthetic peptides. A specific protein of about 250 kD was identified by both immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting. The protein was found in all tissues and cell lines examined and was detected in human, rat, and mouse tissues. Based on the homology between the NF1 gene product and members of the GAP superfamily, the name NF1-GAP-related protein (NF1-GRD) was suggested. DeClue et al. (1991) raised rabbit antisera to a bacterially synthesized peptide corresponding to the GAP-related domain of NF1 (NF1-GRD). The sera specifically detected a 280-kD protein in lysates of HeLa cells. This protein corresponded to the NF1 gene product, as shown by several criteria. NF1 was present in a large molecular mass complex in fibroblast and schwannoma cell lines and appeared to associate with a very large (400-500 kD) protein in both cell lines.

Daston et al. (1992) raised antibodies against peptides coded by portions of the NF1 cDNA. These antibodies specifically recognized a 220-kD protein, called neurofibromin, in both human and rat spinal cord. Neurofibromin was most abundant in the nervous system. Immunostaining of tissue sections indicated that neurons, oligodendrocytes, and nonmyelinating Schwann cells contained neurofibromin, whereas astrocytes and myelinating Schwann cells did not.

Trovo-Marqui and Tajara (2006) stated that 4 splicing exons (9a, 10a-2, 23a, and 48a) are responsible for the production of 5 human neurofibromin isoforms (II, 3, 4, 9a, and 10a-2), which exhibit differential expression in distinct tissues. Neurofibromin II, named GRD2 (domain II-related GAP), is the result of the insertion of exon 23a, is expressed in Schwann cells, and has a reduced capacity of acting as GAP. Neurofibromins 3 and 4, which contain exon 48a and both exons 23a and 48a, respectively, are expressed in muscle tissue, mainly in cardiac and skeleton muscles. Neurofibromin 9a (also called 9br) is the result of the inclusion of exon 9a and shows limited neuronal expression. Isoform 10a-2 is the result of insertion of exon 10a-2, which introduces a transmembrane domain. This isoform has been observed in the majority of human tissues analyzed.


Gene Structure

Xu et al. (1990) found that 3 active genes, called OMGP (164345), EVI2B (158381), and EVI2A (158380), lie within an intron of NF1 but in opposite orientation.

Xu et al. (1992) found a pseudogene of the AK3L1 gene (103030) in an intron of the NF1 gene. It appeared to be a processed pseudogene since it lacked introns and contained a polyadenylate tract; it nevertheless retained coding potential because the open reading frame was not impaired by any observed base substitutions.

Heim et al. (1994) cited evidence that the NF1 gene spans approximately 350 kb of genomic DNA, encodes an mRNA of 11 to 13 kb, and contains at least 56 exons.

Li et al. (1995) showed that the 5-prime end of the NF1 gene is embedded in a CpG island containing a NotI restriction site and that the remainder of the gene lies in the adjacent 35-kb NotI fragment. In their efforts to develop a comprehensive screen for NF1 mutations, they isolated genomic DNA clones that together contain the entire NF1 cDNA sequence. They identified all intron-exon boundaries of the coding region and established that it contains at least 59 exons. The 3-prime untranslated region of the NF1 gene was found to span approximately 3.5 kb and to be continuous with the stop codon.

Trovo-Marqui and Tajara (2006) stated that the NF1 gene contains 61 exons.


Mapping

Barker et al. (1987) demonstrated that the gene responsible for neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200) is located in the pericentromeric region of chromosome 17.

Wallace et al. (1990) identified a large transcript from the candidate NF1 region on chromosome 17q11.2 that was disrupted in 3 patients with neurofibromatosis type I. The changes disrupted expression of the NF1 transcript in all 3 patients, consistent with the hypothesis that it acts as a tumor suppressor.

Pseudogenes

Legius et al. (1992) characterized an NF1-related locus on chromosome 15. The nonprocessed NF1 pseudogene (NF1P1) can produce additional fragments in Southern blotting, pulsed field gel, and PCR experiments with some NF1 cDNA probes or oligonucleotides. In addition, certain regions of the NF1 gene cross-hybridize with a locus on chromosome 14. These loci can cause confusion in the mutation analysis of patients with NF1.

Numerous NF1 pseudogenes have been identified in the human genome. Those in 2q21, 14q11, and 22q11 form a subset with a similar genomic organization and a high sequence homology. By PCR and fluorescence in situ hybridization, Luijten et al. (2001) studied the extent of the homology of the regions surrounding these NF1 pseudogenes. They found that a fragment of at least 640 kb is homologous between the 3 regions. Based on previous studies and these new findings, they proposed a model for the spreading of the NF1 pseudogene-containing regions. A fragment of approximately 640 kb was first duplicated in chromosome region 2q21 and transposed to 14q11. Subsequently, this fragment was duplicated in 14q11 and transposed to 22q11. A part of the 640-kb fragment in 14q11, with a length of about 430 kb, was further duplicated to a variable extent in 14q11. In addition, Luijten et al. (2001) identified sequences that may facilitate the duplication and transposition of the 640-kb and 430-kb fragments.


Gene Function

DeClue et al. (1992) presented evidence implicating the NF1 protein as a tumor suppressor gene product that negatively regulates p21(ras) (see 190020) and defined a 'positive' growth role for RAS activity in NF1 malignancies.

Basu et al. (1992) presented evidence supporting the hypothesis that NF1 is a tumor-suppressor gene whose product acts upstream of the RAS proteins. They showed that the RAS proteins in malignant tumor cell lines from patients with NF1 were in a constitutively activated state as measured by the ratio of the guanine nucleotides bound to them, i.e., the ratio of GTP (active) to GDP (inactive). Transforming mutants of p21(ras) bind large amounts of GTP, whereas wildtype p21(ras) is almost entirely GDP-bound.

Nakafuku et al. (1993) took advantage of the yeast RAS system to isolate mutants in the RAS GTPase activating protein-related domain of the NF1 gene product (NF1-GRD) that can act as antioncogenes specific for oncogenic RAS. They demonstrated that these mutant NF1-GRDs, when expressed in mammalian cells, were able to induce morphologic reversion of RAS-transformed NIH 3T3 cells.

Johnson et al. (1993) stated that in schwannoma cell lines from patients with neurofibromatosis, loss of neurofibromin is associated with impaired regulation of GTP/RAS. They analyzed other neural crest-derived tumor cell lines and showed that some melanoma and neuroblastoma cell lines established from tumors occurring in patients without neurofibromatosis also contained reduced or undetectable levels of neurofibromin, with concomitant genetic abnormalities of the NF1 locus. In contrast to the schwannoma cell lines, however, GTP/RAS was appropriately regulated in the melanoma and neuroblastoma lines that were deficient in neurofibromin, even when HRAS (190020) was overexpressed. These results demonstrated that some neural crest tumors not associated with neurofibromatosis have acquired somatically inactivated NF1 genes and suggested a tumor-suppressor function for neurofibromin that is independent of RAS GTPase activation.

Silva et al. (1997) cited several studies that suggested a role of neurofibromin in brain function. The expression of the NF1 gene is largely restricted to neuronal tissues in the adult. This GTPase-activating protein may act as a negative regulator of neurotrophin (see BDNF; 113505)-mediated signaling. They also noted immunohistochemical studies that suggested that activation of astrocytes may be common in the brain of NF1 patients.

In a review of the molecular neurobiology of human cognition, Weeber and Sweatt (2002) presented an overview of the RAS-ERK-CREB pathway, including the function of NF1. The authors discussed publications that implicated dysfunction of this signal transduction cascade in cognitive defects, including mental retardation caused by mutation in the NF1 gene.

Vogel et al. (1995) used a targeted disruption of the NF1 gene in mice to examine the role of neurofibromin in the acquisition of neurotrophin dependence in embryonic neurons. They showed that both neural crest- and placode-derived sensory neurons isolated from NF1 -/- embryos develop, extend neurites, and survive in the absence of neurotrophins, whereas their wildtype counterparts die rapidly unless nerve growth factor (162030) or BDNF is added to the culture medium. Moreover, NF1 -/- sympathetic neurons survive for extended periods and acquire mature morphology in the presence of NGF-blocking antibodies. These results were considered by Vogel et al. (1995) as consistent with a model wherein neurofibromin acts as a negative regulator of neurotrophin-mediated signaling for survival of embryonic peripheral neurons.

For the most part the NF1 tumor suppressor acts through the interaction of its GRD with the product of the RAS protooncogene. Skuse et al. (1996) discovered an mRNA editing site within the NF1 mRNA. Editing at this site changes a cytidine at nucleotide 2914 to a uridine, creating an in-frame translation stop codon. The edited transcript, if translated, would produce a protein truncated in the N-terminal region of the GRD, thereby inactivating the NF1 tumor-suppressor function. Analysis of RNA from a variety of cell lines, tumors, and peripheral blood cells revealed that the NF1 mRNA undergoes editing, to different extents, in every cell type studied. Three tumors analyzed as part of their study, an astrocytoma, a neurofibroma, and a neurofibrosarcoma, each had levels of NF1 mRNA editing substantially higher than did peripheral blood leukocytes. To investigate the role played by editing in NF1 tumorigenesis, Cappione et al. (1997) analyzed RNA from 19 NF1 and 4 non-NF1 tumors. (The authors referred to the editing site as nucleotide 3916.) They observed varying levels in NF1 mRNA editing in different tumors, with a higher range of editing in more malignant tumors (e.g., neurofibrosarcomas) compared to benign tumors (cutaneous neurofibromas). Plexiform neurofibromas had an intermediate range of levels of NF1 mRNA editing. The constitutional levels of NF1 mRNA editing varied slightly in NF1 individuals but were consistent with the levels observed in non-NF1 individuals. In every case, there was a greater level of NF1 mRNA editing in the tumor than in the nontumor tissue from the same patient. These results suggested to Cappione et al. (1997) that inappropriately high levels of NF1 mRNA editing indeed plays a role in NF1 tumorigenesis and that editing may result in the functional equivalent of biallelic inactivation of the NF1 tumor suppressor.

Mukhopadhyay et al. (2002) studied C-to-U RNA editing in peripheral nerve sheath tumor samples (PNSTs) from 34 patients with NF1. Whereas most showed low levels of RNA editing, 8 of the 34 tumors demonstrated 3 to 12% C-to-U editing of NF1 RNA. These tumors demonstrated 2 distinguishing characteristics. First, these PNSTs expressed APOBEC1 (600130) mRNA, the catalytic deaminase of the holoenzyme that edits APOB (107730) RNA. Second, NF1 RNA from these PNSTs contained increased proportions of an alternatively spliced exon, 23A, downstream of the edited base in which editing occurs preferentially. These findings, together with results of both in vivo and in vitro experiments with APOBEC1, strongly suggested an important mechanistic linkage between NF1 RNA splicing and C-to-U editing and provided a basis for understanding the heterogeneity of posttranscriptional regulation of NF1 expression.

The NF1 tumor suppressor protein is thought to restrict cell proliferation by functioning as a Ras-specific guanosine triphosphatase-activating protein. However, The et al. (1997) found that Drosophila homozygous for null mutations of an NF1 homolog show no obvious signs of perturbed RAS1-mediated signaling. Loss of NF1 resulted in a reduction in size of larvae, pupae, and adults. This size defect was not modified by manipulating RAS1 signaling but was restored by expression of activated adenosine 3-prime, 5-prime-monophosphate -dependent protein kinase (PKA; see 176911). Thus, NF1 and PKA appear to interact in a pathway that controls the overall growth of Drosophila. Guo et al. (1997) showed, from a study of Drosophila NF1 mutants, that NF1 is essential for the cellular response to the neuropeptide PACAP38 (pituitary adenylyl cyclase-adenosine activating polypeptide) at the neuromuscular junction. The peptide induced a 3-prime, 5-prime-monophosphate (cAMP) pathway. This response was eliminated in NF1 mutants. NF1 appeared to regulate the rutabaga-encoded adenylyl cyclase rather than the RAS-RAF pathway. Moreover, the NF1 defect was rescued by the exposure of cells to pharmacologic treatment that increased concentrations of cAMP.

Gutmann (2001) reviewed the functions of neurofibromin and merlin, the product of the NF2 gene (607379), in tumor suppression and cell-cell signaling, respectively.

Trovo-Marqui and Tajara (2006) provided a detailed review of neurofibromin and its role in neurofibromatosis.

Using a proteomic approach, Phan et al. (2010) showed that ETEA (FAF2; 616935) interacted with NF1. Overexpression of ETEA downregulated NF1 in human cells. ETEA ubiquitinated the GAP-related domain of NF1 in a UBX domain-dependent manner in vitro. Silencing of ETEA increased NF1 levels and downregulated RAS activity.


Molecular Genetics

Neurofibromatosis Type I

Using pulsed field gel electrophoresis, Upadhyaya et al. (1990) identified a 90-kb deletion in the proximal portion of 17q in 1 of 90 unrelated patients with neurofibromatosis I. Viskochil et al. (1990) detected deletions of 190, 40, and 11 kb in the gene located at the 17q translocation breakpoint in 3 patients with NF1.

In an NF1 patient, Wallace et al. (1991) identified an insertion of an Alu sequence in an intron of the NF1 gene, resulting in deletion of the downstream exon during splicing and a frameshift (613113.0001).

Cawthon et al. (1990) identified 2 different point mutations in the NF1 gene (L348P; 613113.0003 and R365X; 613113.0004) in patients with NF1.

Upadhyaya et al. (1992) identified multiple germline NF1 mutations (see, e.g., 613113.0006-613113.0009) in patients with NF1.

Weiming et al. (1992) identified mutations in the NF1 gene in at most 3% of NF1 subjects in an analysis that covered 17% of the coding sequence by SSCP and a larger region by Southern blotting. The results suggested that most NF1 mutations lie elsewhere in the coding sequence or outside it.

Collins (1993) developed FISH techniques to detect large deletions in the NF1 gene.

By denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE), Valero et al. (1994) screened 70 unrelated NF1 patients for mutations in exons 29 and 31. Of the 4 mutations that were identified, 3 consisted of C-to-T transitions resulting in nonsense mutations: 2 in exon 29 (5242C-T; 613113.0004 and 5260C-T) and 1 in exon 31 (5839C-T). The fourth mutation consisted of a 2-bp deletion in exon 31, 5843delAA, resulting in a premature stop codon. The 5839C-T mutation had previously been reported in 3 independent studies, suggesting that this position is a mutation hotspot within the NF1 gene. It occurs in a CpG residue.

Heim et al. (1994) stated that although mutations had been sought in several hundred NF1 patients, by August 1994, only 70 germline mutations had been reported in a total of 78 individuals; only the R1947X (613113.0012) mutation had been seen in as many as 6 unrelated patients. NF1 mutations that had been identified included 14 large (more than 25 bp) deletions, 3 large insertions, 18 small (less than 25 bp) deletions, 8 small insertions, 6 nonsense mutations, 14 missense mutations, and 7 intronic mutations. At least 56 (80%) of the 70 mutations potentially encode a truncated protein because of premature translation termination.

Abernathy et al. (1997) stated that about half of NF1 cases represent new mutations and fewer than 100 constitutional mutations had been reported. They used a combined heteroduplex/SSCP approach to search for mutations in the NF1 gene in a set of 67 unrelated NF1 patients and identified 26 mutations and/or variants in 45 of the 59 exons tested. Disease-causing mutations were found in 19% (13 of 67) of cases studied. The mutations included splice mutations, insertions, deletions, and point changes.

Maynard et al. (1997) screened exon 16 of the NF1 gene in 465 unrelated NF1 patients. Nine novel mutations were identified: 3 nonsense, 2 single-base deletions, 1 7-bp duplication, 2 missense, and 1 recurrent splice site mutation. No mutations had been reported previously in exon 16, which is the largest exon (441 bp) of NF1. The previous absence of mutation identification in exon 16 suggested to the authors that codons in this region may have a lower propensity to mutate.

Stop, or nonsense, mutations can have a number of effects. In the case of several genes, they affect mRNA metabolism and reduce the amount of detectable mRNA. Also, in the NF1 gene, a correlation between a high proportion of stop mutations and unequal expression of the 2 alleles is demonstrable. A second, less common outcome is that mRNA containing a nonsense mutation is translated and results in a truncated protein. A third possible outcome is an abnormally spliced mRNA induced by a premature-termination codon (PTC) in the skipped exon. This was demonstrated in several disease genes, including the CFTR gene (Hull et al., 1994) and the fibrillin gene (Dietz et al., 1993). Hoffmeyer et al. (1998) characterized several stop mutations localized within a few basepairs in exons 7 and 37 of the NF1 gene and noticed complete skipping of either exon in some cases. Because skipping of exons 7 and 37 does not lead to a frameshift, premature termination codons are avoided. Hoffmeyer et al. (1998) found that some other stop mutations in the same general region did not lead to a skip. Calculations of minimum-free-energy structures of the respective regions suggested that both changes in the secondary structure of mRNA and creation or disruption of exonic sequences relevant for the splicing process may in fact cause these different splice phenomena observed in the NF1 gene.

Mutation analysis in NF1 has been hampered by the large size of the gene (350 kb with 60 exons), the high rate of new mutations, lack of mutational clustering, and the presence of numerous homologous loci. Mutation detection methods based on the direct analysis of the RNA transcript of the gene permit the rapid screening of large multiexonic genes. However, detection of frameshift or nonsense mutations can be limited by instability of the mutant mRNA species due to nonsense-mediated decay. To determine the frequency of this allelic exclusion, Osborn and Upadhyaya (1999) analyzed total lymphocyte RNA from 15 NF1 patients with known truncation mutations and a panel of 40 NF1 patients with unknown mutations. The level of expression of the mutant message was greatly reduced in 2 of the 15 samples (13%), and in 3 of the 18 informative samples from the panel of 40. A coupled RT-PCR and protein truncation test method was subsequently applied to screen RNA from the panel of 40 unrelated NF1 patients. Aberrant polypeptide bands were identified and characterized in 21 samples (53%); each of these had a different mutation. The mutations were uniformly distributed across the gene, and 14 represented novel changes, providing further information on the germline mutational spectrum of the NF1 gene.

The mutation rate in the NF1 gene is one of the highest known in humans, with approximately 50% of all NF1 patients presenting with novel mutations (review by Huson and Hughes, 1994). Despite the high frequency of this disorder in all populations, relatively few mutations had been identified at the molecular level, with most unique to 1 family. A limited number of mutation 'hotspots' had been identified: R1947X in exon 31 (613113.0012), and the 4-bp region between nucleotides 6789 and 6792 in exon 37, both implicated in about 2% of NF1 patients (review by Upadhyaya and Cooper (1998)). Messiaen et al. (1999) identified another mutation hotspot in exon 10b. By analyzing 232 unrelated NF1 patients, they identified 9 mutations in exon 10b, indicating that this exon is mutated in almost 4% of NF1 patients. Two mutations, Y489C (613113.0023) and L508P (613113.0024), were recurrent, whereas the others were unique. The authors suggested that since 10b shows the highest mutation rate of any of the 60 NF1 exons, it should be given priority in mutation analysis.

Fahsold et al. (2000) performed a mutation screen of the NF1 gene in more than 500 unrelated patients with NF1. For each patient, the whole coding sequence and all splice sites were studied for aberrations, either by the protein truncation test (PTT), temperature-gradient gel electrophoresis (TGGE) of genomic PCR products, or, most often, by direct genomic sequencing of all individual exons. Of the variants found, they concluded that 161 different ones were novel. Mutation-detection efficiencies of the various screening methods were similar: 47.1% for PTT, 53.7% for TGGE, and 54.9% for direct sequencing. Of all sequence variants found, less than 20% represented C-to-T or G-to-A transitions within a CpG dinucleotide, and only 6 different mutations also occurred in NF1 pseudogenes, with 5 being typical C-to-T transitions in a CpG. Thus, neither frequent deamination of 5-methylcytosines nor interchromosomal gene conversion can account for the high mutation rate of the NF1 gene. As opposed to the truncating mutations, the 28 (10.1%) missense or single-amino-acid-deletion mutations identified clustered in 2 distinct regions, the GAP-related domain and an upstream gene segment comprising exons 11 to 17. The latter forms a so-called cysteine/serine-rich domain with 3 cysteine pairs suggestive of ATP binding, as well as 3 potential cAMP-dependent protein kinase recognition sites obviously phosphorylated by PKA. Coincidence of mutated amino acids and those conserved between human and Drosophila strongly suggested significant functional relevance of this region, with major roles played by exons 12a and 15 and part of exon 16.

Ars et al. (2000) applied a whole NF1 cDNA screening methodology to the study of 80 unrelated NF1 patients and identified 44 different mutations, 32 being novel, in 52 of the patients. Mutations were detected in 87% of the familial cases and in 51% of the sporadic ones. At least 15 of the 80 NF1 patients (19%) had recurrence of a previously observed mutation. The study showed that in 50% of the patients in whom the mutations were identified, these resulted in splicing alterations. Most of the splicing mutations did not involve the conserved AG/GT dinucleotides of the donor and acceptor splice sites. One frameshift, 2 nonsense, and 2 missense mutations were also responsible for alterations in mRNA splicing. Location and type of mutation within the NF1 gene and its putative effect at the protein level did not indicate any relationship to any specific clinical feature of NF1. The high proportion of aberrant spliced transcripts detected in NF1 patients stressed the importance of studying mutations at both the genomic and RNA level. Ars et al. (2000) raised the possibility that part of the clinical variability in NF1 is related to mutations affecting mRNA splicing, which is the most common molecular defect in NF1.

Messiaen et al. (2000) studied 67 unrelated NF1 patients fulfilling the NIH diagnostic criteria (Stumpf et al., 1988; Gutmann et al., 1997), 29 familial and 38 sporadic cases, using a cascade of complementary techniques. They performed a protein truncation test starting from puromycin-treated EBV cell lines and, if no mutation was found, continued with heteroduplex, FISH, Southern blot, and cytogenetic analysis. The authors identified the germline mutation in 64 of 67 patients, and 32 of the mutations were novel. The mutation spectrum consisted of 25 nonsense, 12 frameshift, 19 splice mutations, 6 missense and/or small in-frame deletions, 1 deletion of the entire NF1 gene, and a translocation t(14;17)(q32;q11.2). Their data suggested that exons 10a-10c and 37 are mutation-rich regions and that together with some recurrent mutations they may account for almost 30% of the mutations in classic NF1 patients. Messiaen et al. (2000) found a high frequency of unusual splice mutations outside of the AG/GT 5-prime and 3-prime splice sites. As some of these mutations formed stable transcripts, it remained possible that a truncated neurofibromin was formed.

Skuse and Cappione (1997) reviewed the possible molecular basis of the wide clinical variability in NF1 observed even among affected members of the same family (Huson et al., 1989). The complexities of alternative splicing and RNA editing may be involved. Skuse and Cappione (1997) suggested that the classical 2-hit model for tumor suppressor inactivation used to explain NF1 tumorigenesis can be expanded to include post-transcriptional mechanisms that regulate NF1 gene expression. Aberrations in these mechanisms may play a role in the observed clinical variability.

Eisenbarth et al. (2000) described a systematic approach of searching for somatic inactivation of the NF1 gene in neurofibromas. In the course of these studies, they identified 2 novel intragenic polymorphisms: a tetranucleotide repeat and a 21-bp duplication. Among 7 neurofibromas from 4 different NF1 patients, they detected 3 tumor-specific point mutations and 2 LOH events. The results suggested that small subtle mutations occur with similar frequency to that of LOH in benign neurofibromas and that somatic inactivation of the NF1 gene is a general event in these tumors. Eisenbarth et al. (2000) concluded that the spectrum of somatic mutations occurring in various tumors from individual NF1 patients may contribute to the understanding of variable expressivity of the NF1 phenotype.

Klose et al. (1998) identified a novel missense mutation in the NF1 gene (R1276P; 613113.0022) in a patient with a classic multisymptomatic NF1 phenotype, including a malignant schwannoma. The mutation specifically abolished the Ras-GTPase-activating function of neurofibromin. The authors suggested that therapeutic approaches aimed at the reduction of the Ras-GTP levels in neural crest-derived cells may relieve NF1 symptoms.

Kluwe et al. (1999) stated that plexiform neurofibroma can be found in about 30% of NF1 patients, often causing severe clinical symptoms. They examined 14 such tumors from 10 NF1 patients for loss of heterozygosity at the NF1 gene using 4 intragenic polymorphic markers. LOH was found in 8 tumors from 5 patients, and was suspected in 1 additional tumor from another patient. They interpreted these findings as suggesting that loss of the second allele, and thus inactivation of both alleles of the NF1 gene, is associated with the development of plexiform neurofibromas. The 14 plexiform neurofibromas were also examined for mutation in the TP53 gene; no mutations were found.

Faravelli et al. (1999) reported a family in which 7 members developed brain tumors which in 4 were confirmed as gliomas. Three of these individuals had a clinical history strongly suggestive of NF1. Two individuals with very mild features of NF1 insufficient to meet diagnostic criteria carried a splice site mutation in intron 29 of the NF1 gene, creating a frameshift and premature protein termination. Faravelli et al. (1999) noted the unusually high incidence of brain tumors in this family with the NF1 phenotype and suggested that some cases of familial glioma may be explained by mutations in the NF1 gene.

Kluwe et al. (2003) examined 20 patients with spinal tumors from 17 families for clinical symptoms associated with NF1 and for NF1 mutations. Typical NF1 features were found in 12 patients from 11 families. Typical NF1 mutations were found in 10 of the 11 index patients in this group, including 8 truncating mutations, 1 missense mutation, and 1 deletion of the entire NF1 gene. Eight patients from 6 families had no or only a few additional NF1-associated symptoms besides multiple spinal tumors, which were distributed symmetrically in all cases and affected all 38 nerve roots in 6 patients. Only mild NF1 mutations were found in 4 of the 6 index patients in the latter group, including 1 splicing mutation, 2 missense mutations, and 1 nonsense mutation in exon 47 at the 3-prime end of the gene. The data indicated that patients with spinal tumors can have various NF1 symptoms and NF1 mutations; however, patients with no or only a few additional NF1 symptoms may be a subgroup or may have a distinct form of NF1, probably associated with milder NF1 mutations or other genetic alterations.

The underestimates of NF1 gene mutations in neurofibromatosis type I have been attributed to the large size of the NF1 gene, the considerable frequency of gross deletions, and the common occurrence of splicing defects that are only detectable by cDNA analysis. A number of splicing errors do not affect the canonical GT splice donor or AG splice acceptor, or create novel splice sites, but may exert their effect by means of an altered interaction between an exonic splice enhancer (ESE) and mRNA splicing factors (Messiaen et al., 2000; Liu et al., 2001). Colapietro et al. (2003) reported skipping of exon 7 and sequence alterations in ESEs in a patient with severe NF1 (613113.0036).

The analysis of somatic NF1 gene mutations in neurofibromas from NF1 patients shows that each neurofibroma results from an individual second hit mutation; thus, factors that influence somatic mutation rates may be regarded as potential modifiers of NF1. Wiest et al. (2003) performed a mutation screen of numerous neurofibromas from 2 NF1 patients and found a predominance of point mutations, small deletions, and insertions as second hit mutations in both patients. Seven novel mutations were reported. Together with the results of studies that showed LOH as the predominant second hit in neurofibromas of other patients, these results suggest that in different patients different factors may influence the somatic mutation rate and thereby the severity of the disease.

Not only can mutations in nucleotides at the ends of introns result in abnormalities of splicing, but nonsense, missense, and even translationally silent mutations have been shown to cause exon skipping. The analysis of individual mutations of this kind can shed light on basic pre-mRNA splicing mechanisms. Using cDNA-based mutation detection analysis, Zatkova et al. (2004) identified 1 missense and 6 nonsense mutations (e.g., 613113.0042) that lead to different extents of exon-lacking transcripts in NF1 patients. They confirmed mutation-associated exon skipping in a heterologous hybrid minigene context. Because of evidence that the disruption of functional ESE sequences is frequently the mechanism underlying mutation-associated exon skipping, Zatkova et al. (2004) examined the wildtype and mutant NF1 sequences with 2 available ESE prediction programs. Either or both programs predicted the disruption of ESE motifs in 6 of the 7 analyzed mutations. To ascertain the function of the predicted ESEs, Zatkova et al. (2004) quantitatively measured their ability to rescue splicing of an enhancer-dependent exon, and found that all 7 mutant ESEs had reduced splicing enhancement activity compared to the wildtype sequences. The results suggested that the wildtype sequences function as ESE elements, whose disruption is responsible for the mutation-associated exon skipping observed in NF1 patients. Furthermore, this study illustrated the utility of ESE prediction programs for delineating candidate sequences that may serve as ESE elements.

In a girl with aniridia (106210), microphthalmia, microcephaly, and cafe-au-lait macules, Henderson et al. (2007) identified heterozygous mutations in the PAX6 (R38W; 607108.0026), NF1 (R192X; 613113.0046), and OTX2 (Y179X; 600037.0004) genes. Her mother, who carried the NF1 and PAX6 mutations, had NF1 with typical eye defects; in addition, although her eyes were of normal size, she had small corneas, and also had cataracts, optic nerve hypoplasia, nystagmus, and mild iris stromal hypoplasia with normal-sized pupils. The proband's father, who had multiple ocular defects (MCOPS5; 610125), had previously been studied by Ragge et al. (2005) and was heterozygous for the OTX2 nonsense mutation. Henderson et al. (2007) noted that the proband's phenotype was surprisingly mild, given that mutations in PAX6, OTX2, or NF1 can cause a variety of severe developmental defects.

Sabbagh et al. (2009) examined the phenotypic correlations between affected relatives in 750 NF1 patients from 275 multiplex families collected through the NF-France Network. Twelve NF1-related clinical features, including 5 quantitative traits (number of cafe-au-lait spots of small size and of large size, and number of cutaneous, subcutaneous, and plexiform neurofibromas) and 7 binary ones, were scored. All clinical features studied, with the exception of neoplasms, showed significant familial aggregation after adjusting for age and sex. For most of them, patterns of familial correlations indicated a strong genetic component with no apparent influence of the constitutional NF1 mutation. Heritability estimates of the 5 quantitative traits ranged from 0.26 to 0.62. Nine tag SNPs in NF1 were genotyped in 1,132 individuals from 313 NF1 families. No significant deviations of transmission of any of the NF1 variants to affected offspring was found for any of the 12 clinical features examined, based on single marker or haplotype analysis. Sabbagh et al. (2009) concluded that genetic modifiers, unlinked to the NF1 locus, contribute to the variable expressivity of the disease.

Juvenile Myelomonocytic Leukemia

Juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML; 607785) is a pediatric myelodysplastic syndrome that is associated with neurofibromatosis type I. The NF1 gene regulates the growth of immature myeloid cells by accelerating guanosine triphosphate hydrolysis on RAS proteins. Side et al. (1998) undertook a study to determine if the NF1 gene is involved in the pathogenesis of JMML in children without a clinical diagnosis of NF1. An in vitro transcription and translation system was used to screen JMML marrows from 20 children for NF1 mutations that resulted in a truncated protein. SSCP analysis was used to detect RAS point mutations in these samples. Side et al. (1998) confirmed mutations of NF1 in 3 cases of JMML, 1 of which also showed loss of the normal NF1 allele. An NF1 mutation was detected in normal tissue from the only patient tested, suggesting that JMML may be the presenting feature of NF1 in some children. Activating RAS mutations were found in 4 patients; as expected, none of these samples harbored NF1 mutations. Because 10 to 14% of children with JMML had a clinical diagnosis of NF1, these data were consistent with the existence of NF1 mutations in approximately 30% of JMML cases.

The risk of malignant myeloid disorders in young children with NF1 is 200 to 500 times the normal risk. Neurofibromin, the protein encoded by the NF1 gene, negatively regulates signals transduced by Ras proteins. Genetic and biochemical data support the hypothesis that NF1 functions as a tumor-suppressor gene in immature myeloid cells. This hypothesis was further supported by the demonstration by Side et al. (1997) that both NF1 alleles were inactivated in bone marrow cells from children with NF1 complicated by malignant myeloid disorders. Using an in vitro transcription and translation system, they screened bone marrow samples from 18 such children for NF1 mutations that cause a truncated protein. Mutations were confirmed by direct sequencing of genomic DNA from the patients, and from the affected parents in cases of familial NF1. Side et al. (1997) found that the normal NF1 allele was absent in bone marrow samples from 5 of 8 children who had truncating mutations of the NF1 gene.

Neurofibromatosis-Noonan Syndrome

The overlap syndrome neurofibromatosis-Noonan syndrome (601321) shows features of both disorders, as was first noted by Allanson et al. (1985). Colley et al. (1996) examined 94 sequentially identified patients with NF1 from their genetic register and found Noonan features in 12. Carey et al. (1997) identified a 3-bp deletion of exon 17 of the NF1 gene in a family with NFNS (613113.0033). Stevenson et al. (2006) provided a follow-up of this family. Baralle et al. (2003) identified mutations in the NF1 gene in 2 patients with the overlap syndrome (613113.0034 and 613113.0035).

Bertola et al. (2005) provided molecular evidence of the concurrence of neurofibromatosis and Noonan syndrome in a patient with a de novo missense mutation in the NF1 gene (613113.0043) and a mutation in the PTPN11 gene (176876.0023) inherited from her father. The proposita was noted to have cafe-au-lait spots at birth. Valvar and infundibular pulmonary stenosis and aortic coarctation were diagnosed at 20 months of age and surgically corrected at 3 years of age. As illustrated, the patient had marked hypertelorism and proptosis as well as freckling and cafe-au-lait spots. Lisch nodules were present. At the age of 8 years, a pilocytic astrocytoma in the suprasellar region involving the optic chiasm (first presenting symptomatically at 2 years of age), was partially resected. The father, who was diagnosed with Noonan syndrome, had downslanting palpebral fissures and prominent nasal labial folds. He was of short stature (159 cm) and had pectus excavatum. Electrocardiogram showed left-anterior hemiblock and complete right bundle branch block.

In a study of 17 unrelated subjects with NFNS, De Luca et al. (2005) found NF1 gene defects in 16. Remarkably, there was a high prevalence of in-frame defects affecting exons 24 and 25, which encode a portion of the GAP-related domain. No defect was observed in PTPN11 (176876), which is the usual site of mutations causing classic Noonan syndrome. De Luca et al. (2005) stated that including their study, 18 distinct NF1 gene mutations had been described in 22 unrelated patients with NFNS.

Watson Syndrome

Watson syndrome (193520) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by pulmonic stenosis, cafe-au-lait spots, decreased intellectual ability, and short stature. Most affected individuals have relative macrocephaly and Lisch nodules and about one-third of those affected have neurofibromas. Because of clinical similarities between Watson syndrome and neurofibromatosis, Allanson et al. (1991) performed linkage studies in families with Watson syndrome, using probes known to flank the NF1 gene on chromosome 17, and found tight linkage. In a patient with Watson syndrome, Upadhyaya et al. (1992) identified an 80-kb deletion in the NF1 gene (613113.0011). Tassabehji et al. (1993) demonstrated an almost perfect in-frame tandem duplication of 42 bases in exon 28 of the NF1 gene in 3 members of a family with Watson syndrome (613113.0010).

Spinal Neurofibromatosis

In all 5 affected members of 3-generation family with spinal neurofibromatosis (162210) and cafe-au-lait spots, Ars et al. (1998) identified a frameshift mutation in the NF1 gene (613113.0018).

In affected members of 2 families with spinal neurofibromas but no cafe-au-lait macules, Kaufmann et al. (2001) identified 2 different mutations in the NF1 gene (613113.0028 and 613113.0029, respectively). Both NF1 mutations caused a reduction in neurofibromin of approximately 50%, with no truncated protein present in the cells. The findings demonstrated that typical NF1 null mutations can result in a phenotype that is distinct from classic NF1, showing only a small spectrum of the NF1 symptoms, such as multiple spinal tumors, but not completely fitting the current clinical criteria for spinal NF.

Role in Cancer

Desmoplastic neurotropic melanoma (DNM) is an uncommon melanoma subtype that shares morphologic characteristics with nerve sheath tumors. For that reason, Gutzmer et al. (2000) analyzed 15 DNMs and 20 melanomas without morphologic features of desmoplasia or neuroid differentiation (i.e., common melanomas) for LOH at the NF1 locus and flanking regions. Allelic loss was detected in 10 of 15 (67%) DNMs but in only 1 of 20 (5%) common melanomas. LOH was most frequently observed at marker IVS38, located in intron 38 of NF1. These data suggested a role for NF1 in the pathogenesis of DNM and supported the hypothesis that exon 37 may encode a functional domain.

The Cancer Genome Atlas Research Network (2008) reported the interim integrative analysis of DNA copy number, gene expression, and DNA methylation aberrations in 206 glioblastomas and nucleotide sequence alterations in 91 of the 206 glioblastomas. The RTK/RAS/PI3K signaling pathway was altered in 88% of glioblastomas. NF1 was found to be an important gene in glioblastoma, with mutation or homozygous deletion of the NF1 gene present in 18% of tumors.


Animal Model

See 162200 for a discussion of animal models of neurofibromatosis type I.

Ruiz-Lozano and Chien (2003) commented on how it is possible to apply Cre-loxP technology to track the cardiac morphogenic signals mediated by neurofibromin. A growing list of mouse lines that express Cre in specific cardiovascular cell lineages was available.

Gene transcription may be regulated by remote enhancer or insulator regions through chromosome looping. Using a modification of chromosome conformation capture and fluorescence in situ hybridization, Ling et al. (2006) found that 1 allele of the Igf2 (147470)/H19 (103280) imprinting control region (ICR) on mouse chromosome 7 colocalized with 1 allele of Wsb1 (610091)/Nf1 on chromosome 17. Omission of CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF; 604167) or deletion of the maternal ICR abrogated this association and altered Wsb1/Nf1 gene expression. Ling et al. (2006) concluded that CTCF mediates an interchromosomal association, perhaps by directing distant DNA segments to a common transcription factory, and the data provided a model for long-range allele-specific associations between gene regions on different chromosomes that suggested a framework for DNA recombination and RNA trans-splicing.

To investigate the function of NF1 in skeletal development, Kolanczyk et al. (2007) created mice with Nf1 knockout directed to undifferentiated mesenchymal cells of developing limbs. Inactivation of Nf1 in limbs resulted in bowing of the tibia, diminished growth, abnormal vascularization of skeletal tissues, and fusion of the hip joints and other joint abnormalities. Tibial bowing was caused by decreased stability of the cortical bone due to a high degree of porosity, decreased stiffness, and reduction in the mineral content, as well as hyperosteoidosis. Accordingly, cultured osteoblasts showed increased proliferation and decreased ability to differentiate and mineralize. The reduced growth in Nf1-knockout mice was due to reduced proliferation and differentiation of chondrocytes.

Lubeck et al. (2015) found that mice lacking both Nf1 and Rasa1 (139150) in T cells, but not those lacking either Nf1 or Rasa1 alone, developed T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia/lymphoma (see 613065) that originated at an early point in T-cell development and was dependent on activating mutations in Notch1 (190198). Lubeck et al. (2015) concluded that RASA1 and NF1 are co-tumor suppressors in the T-cell lineage.


History

Gervasini et al. (2002) reported a direct tandem duplication of the NF1 gene identified in 17q11.2 by high-resolution FISH. FISH on stretched chromosomes with locus-specific probes revealed the duplication of the NF1 gene from the promoter to the 3-prime untranslated region (UTR), but with at least the absence of exon 22. Duplication was probably present in the human-chimpanzee-gorilla common ancestor, as demonstrated by the finding of the duplicated NF1 gene at orthologous chromosome loci. The authors suggested that the NF1 intrachromosomal duplication may contribute to the high whole-gene mutation rate by gene conversion. In contrast to the findings of Gervasini et al. (2002), however, Kehrer-Sawatzki et al. (2002) studied a female NF1 patient with reciprocal translocation t(17;22)(q11.2; q11.2) and determined that there is a single NF1 gene in the 17q11.2 region. Kehrer-Sawatzki and Messiaen (2003) analyzed another reciprocal translocation, a t(14;17)(q32;q11.2), described in a large family with NF1, which disrupted the NF1 gene (Messiaen et al., 2000) and again reported findings inconsistent with a duplication of the NF1 gene at 17q11.2 as proposed by Gervasini et al. (2002).


ALLELIC VARIANTS 46 Selected Examples):

.0001   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, ALU INS
ClinVar: RCV000000360

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Wallace et al. (1991) demonstrated a de novo heterozygous Alu repetitive element insertion into an intron of the NF1 gene, which resulted in deletion of the downstream exon during splicing and consequently shifted the reading frame. The patient was an isolated case in his family. The insertion, 300-500 bp, began 44 bp upstream of exon 6. This previously undescribed mechanism of mutation indicated that Alu retrotransposition is an ongoing process in the human germline. Alu elements had been involved in the generation of disease mutation by recombination (e.g., in familial hypercholesterolemia (143890) and ADA deficiency) or point mutation (e.g., in gyrate atrophy of the choroid and retina 258870; 613349.0023), but not as a new element.


.0002   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, 5-BP DEL
SNP: rs2151538841, ClinVar: RCV000000361

In 2 patients with neurofibromatosis type I (162200), a 35-year-old man and his daughter, Stark et al. (1991) demonstrated a 5-bp deletion (CCACC or CACCT) and an adjacent transversion, located about 500 bp downstream from the region that codes for a functional domain of the NF1 gene product. The mutation was demonstrable by heteroduplex analysis. The deletion removed the proximal half of a small potential stem-loop and interrupted the reading frame in exon 1. A severely truncated protein with a grossly altered carboxy terminus lacking one-third of its sequence was the predicted consequence. Stark et al. (1992) found that both alleles were expressed in primary cultures of neurofibroma cells and melanocytes from a cafe-au-lait macule of the proband, thus excluding loss of heterozygosity. The authors used the 5-bp deletion for the presymptomatic diagnosis of the 18-month-old third son of the proband.


.0003   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, LEU348PRO
SNP: rs199474792, ClinVar: RCV000000362, RCV000059211

Cawthon et al. (1990) identified point mutations in a 4-kb sequence of the transcript of the NF1 gene at a translocation breakpoint associated with neurofibromatosis type I (162200). One mutant allele contained a T-to-C transition that caused a leu348-to-pro (L348P) substitution, and the second harbored a C-to-T insertion that changed an arg365 to a stop codon (R365X; 613113.0004).


.0004   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, ARG365TER
SNP: rs267606595, ClinVar: RCV000000363

Independently, Cawthon et al. (1990) and Estivill et al. (1991) identified a new mutation in exon 4 of the NF1 gene, a 1087C-T transition (numbering of Cawthon et al., 1990), resulting in an arg365-to-ter (R365X) substitution, in patients with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200). Although a different numbering system was used, this is the same mutation as that found by Valero et al. (1994) and designated 5242C-T in exon 29. They proposed that this site, in a CpG residue, is a hotspot for mutation in the NF1 gene.


.0005   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, LYS1423GLU
SNP: rs137854550, gnomAD: rs137854550, ClinVar: RCV000000364, RCV000489593, RCV000626644, RCV000762990, RCV002305424, RCV002310992, RCV003460397, RCV004798706

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200) and affected members of his family, Li et al. (1992) found an AAG-to-GAG transition at codon 1423 in the NF1 gene, resulting in the substitution of glutamic acid for lysine (K1423E).

The same mutation or a mutation in the same codon leading to substitution of glutamine for lysine through an A-to-C transversion was also observed by Li et al. (1992) as a somatic mutation in adenocarcinoma of the colon, myelodysplastic syndrome, and anaplastic astrocytoma.


.0006   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, 1-BP INS, 5662C
SNP: rs267606596, ClinVar: RCV000000365

In 2 unrelated patients with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Upadhyaya et al. (1992) found insertion of a cytosine within codon 1818 of the NF1 gene that changed the reading frame and resulted in 23 altered amino acids prior to the inappropriate introduction of a stop codon at amino acid 1841. The insertion created a recognition site for enzyme MnlI. (The authors incorrectly stated in their abstract and the legend of their Figure 3 that there was a nucleotide insertion at 'codon 5662.' The nucleotide insertion at residue 5662 occurs within codon 1818 in their cDNA clone of NF1, as correctly represented in the sequence shown in their Figure 3.)


.0007   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, 1-BP INS, FS1841TER
SNP: rs267606597, ClinVar: RCV000000366

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Upadhyaya et al. (1992) found an insertion of thymidine in codon 1823, resulting in a shift of the reading frame, the generation of 18 amino acids different from those of the normal protein, and a gene product that terminated prematurely at amino acid 1840 by the creation of a stop codon at 1841.


.0008   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, LEU2143MET
SNP: rs137854551, ClinVar: RCV000000367

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Upadhyaya et al. (1992) found a heterozygous 6639C-A transversion in the NF1 gene, resulting in a leu2143-to-met (L2143M) substitution.


.0009   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, TYR2213ASN
SNP: rs267606598, gnomAD: rs267606598, ClinVar: RCV000000368

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Upadhyaya et al. (1992) found a heterozygous 6724T-G transversion in the NF1 gene, resulting in a tyr2213-to-asn (Y2213N) substitution.


.0010   WATSON SYNDROME

NF1, 42-BP DUP
ClinVar: RCV000000369

In a family in which Watson syndrome (WTSN; 193520) had occurred in 3 generations, Tassabehji et al. (1993) demonstrated an almost perfect in-frame tandem duplication of 42 bases in exon 28 of the NF1 gene. Unlike the mutations previously described in classic NF1 which result predominantly in null alleles, the mutation in this family would be expected to result in a mutant neurofibromin product. The affected mother had multiple cafe-au-lait patches, freckling in the axillary and groin, low-set posteriorly rotated ears, a squint, and an IQ of 56. She had no Lisch nodules or neurofibromata. A daughter, aged 3.5 years, had multiple cafe-au-lait spots, mild pectus carinatum, hypertelorism with epicanthic folds, a squint, low-set posteriorly rotated ears, and moderate global developmental delay. Her twin brother had ptosis, mild cubitus valgus, bilateral undescended testes, and mild pulmonic valvular stenosis by echocardiography. Neither child had Lisch nodules or neurofibromata.


.0011   WATSON SYNDROME

NF1, 80-KB DEL
ClinVar: RCV000000370

Upadhyaya et al. (1992) found an 80-kb deletion at the NF1 locus in a patient with Watson syndrome (WTSN; 193520).


.0012   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, ARG1947TER
SNP: rs137854552, ClinVar: RCV000000371, RCV000418287, RCV000492774, RCV000762995, RCV001009602, RCV003460398, RCV004547450, RCV004558221, RCV004562178, RCV004668704

A C-to-T transition changing arginine-1947 to a stop codon (R1947X) in the NF1 gene has been described in multiple Caucasian and Japanese families with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), suggesting that this codon, CGA, is a hotspot for mutation, presumably because it contains a CpG dinucleotide. (Numbering of codons is based on Marchuk et al. (1991).) The mutation was described in 3 unrelated Caucasians (Ainsworth et al., 1993; Cawthon et al., 1990; Estivill et al., 1991); at least 2 of these cases were sporadic. Horiuchi et al. (1994) reported the same mutation in 2 unrelated familial cases of NF1. That these represented independent mutations was indicated by the fact that in the 2 families the affected individuals differed with regard to a polymorphism located within the NF1 gene. The frequency of the arg1947-to-ter mutation may be as high as 8% in Japanese and at least 1% in Caucasians. Studying one of the patients with the arg1947-to-ter mutation, Horiuchi et al. (1994) showed that both the normal and the mutant allele were transcribed in a lymphoblastoid cell line.

Heim et al. (1994) stated that the R1947X mutation had been reported in 6 unrelated patients with NF1.

Lazaro et al. (1995) presented 2 further cases of the R1947X mutation in the NF1 gene. They stated that a total of 9 cases of the R1947X mutation had been reported, giving a frequency of about 2%. They developed an allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization assay for the efficient screening of a large number of samples for this relatively common recurrent mutation.

In a sample of 56 unrelated Korean patients with NF1, Park et al. (2000) identified 1 with the R1947X mutation.


.0013   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, IVS18DS, G-A, +1
SNP: rs267606599, gnomAD: rs267606599, ClinVar: RCV000000373, RCV000680818, RCV001009591, RCV001018701, RCV002381233, RCV004547451

Purandare et al. (1995) identified a G-to-A transition at position +1 of intron 18 of the NF1 gene in a 41-year-old Caucasian female in whom the diagnosis of neurofibromatosis (NF1; 162200) was first made at the age of 28 years when she was admitted to hospital for a grand mal seizure. A son was also affected. The mutation resulted in skipping of exon 18 which did not cause a shift in the reading frame but resulted in an in-frame loss of 123 nucleotides from the mRNA and the corresponding 41 amino acids from the protein. Purandare et al. (1995) referred to 3 previously reported splice donor site mutations in the NF1 gene.


.0014   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, 2-BP DEL, 1541AG
SNP: rs267606600, ClinVar: RCV000000374, RCV000164295, RCV000414730, RCV001001001, RCV002288457, RCV003460399, RCV004797745, RCV005016220

Robinson et al. (1996) described a recurrent 2-bp deletion (1541delAG) in exon 10c of the NF1 gene in 2 unrelated patients with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200): one sporadic and one familial case.


.0015   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, MET1035ARG
SNP: rs137854553, ClinVar: RCV000000375

Wu et al. (1996) found a de novo met1035-to-arg (M1035R) missense mutation resulting from a T-to-G transversion in exon 18 of the NF1 gene in a 32-year-old woman with a prior diagnosis of LEOPARD syndrome (151100), who was found to have neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200). At birth, a heart murmur was detected resulting from subvalvular muscular aortic stenosis and valvular aortic stenosis. The skin showed multiple dark lentigines together with a few larger cafe-au-lait patches. The same lentigines were present in the armpits and groin and were not raised. The patient attended a special school for children with mild mental retardation. At the age of 21 years, mitral insufficiency was demonstrated resulting from a double orifice mitral valve. The patient had macrocrania (head circumference 58 cm), apparent hypertelorism, and a coarse face with broad neck. Neurofibromas were not present at the age of 32, and no Lisch nodules were seen by slit-lamp examination. The mutation was absent in the parents, who were clinically normal.


.0016   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, ARG1391SER
SNP: rs137854554, ClinVar: RCV000000376, RCV001810827, RCV002326656

Upadhyaya et al. (1997) identified 14 novel mutations in the GAP-related domain of neurofibromin in patients with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200). One of these mutations was a change at nucleotide 4173 from A to T, changing codon 1391 from AGA (arg) to AGT (ser) (R1391S). The effect of this R1391S missense mutation was studied by in vitro expression of a site-directed mutant and by GAP activity assay. The mutant protein was found to be some 300-fold less active than wildtype NF1 protein.


.0017   REMOVED FROM DATABASE


.0018   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, FAMILIAL SPINAL

NF1, 1-BP INS, 8042A
SNP: rs267606601, ClinVar: RCV000000377

In 5 affected members of a family with spinal neurofibromatosis with cafe-au-lait macules (162210), Ars et al. (1998) identified a 1-bp insertion (8042insA) in exon 46 of the NF1 gene. The mutation was predicted to result in a truncated protein.


.0019   LEUKEMIA, JUVENILE MYELOMONOCYTIC

NF1, TRP1538TER
SNP: rs137854555, ClinVar: RCV000000378, RCV000660063, RCV001007974

Among 20 children with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML; 607785), Side et al. (1998) found 3 with truncating mutations in the NF1 gene. One of the children, a 3-year-old boy, had a G-to-A transition at nucleotide 4614, which converted codon 1538 from tryptophan to stop in exon 27a (W1538X).


.0020   LEUKEMIA, JUVENILE MYELOMONOCYTIC

NF1, IVS34, G-A, +18
ClinVar: RCV000000379

In a 19-month-old boy with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML/Mo7; 607785), Side et al. (1998) found in cloned cDNA aberrant splicing resulting in a shift in the reading frame. Genomic DNA showed an alteration (6579,G-A,+18) in the splice donor consensus sequence flanking exon 34. This mutation introduced an additional 17 nucleotides containing a novel BglI restriction enzyme site into the patient's cDNA. Side et al. (1998) identified this restriction site in amplified cDNA derived from the patient's EBV cell line RNA, thus confirming that this mutation existed in the germline. Furthermore, loss of heterozygosity was demonstrated, indicating inactivation of another NF1 allele.


.0021   LEUKEMIA, JUVENILE MYELOMONOCYTIC

NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I, INCLUDED
NF1, IVS11, A-G, -8
SNP: rs267606602, ClinVar: RCV000000380, RCV000190422

In a 6-month-old boy with juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML; 607785), Side et al. (1998) described a splice mutation in the NF1 gene. Cloned cDNA showed abnormal splicing of 7 nucleotides between exons 10c and 11. The authors had previously found the same mutation in a child with familial NF1 and myelodysplasia syndrome (Side et al. (1997)); genomic DNA sequence showed an abnormal splice acceptor sequence upstream of exon 11 (1642-8A-G) creating a cryptic splice site and consequent frameshift and premature stop codon at codon 555.


.0022   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, ARG1276PRO
SNP: rs137854556, gnomAD: rs137854556, ClinVar: RCV000000381, RCV002267796, RCV002354143

In a family with a classic multisymptomatic NF1 phenotype (162200), including a malignant schwannoma, Klose et al. (1998) found an arg1276-to-pro (R1276P) mutation in the arginine finger of the GAP-related domain (GRD) of the neurofibromin gene, resulting in disruption of the most essential catalytic element for Ras-GAP activity. Klose et al. (1998) presented data demonstrating that the R1276P mutation, unlike previously reported missense mutations of the GRD region, did not impair the secondary and tertiary protein structure. It neither reduced the level of cellular neurofibromin nor influenced its binding to Ras substantially, but it did completely disable GAP activity. The findings provided direct evidence that failure of neurofibromin GAP activity is a critical element in NF1 pathogenesis. The findings suggested that therapeutic approaches aimed at the reduction of the Ras-GTP levels in neural crest-derived cells can be expected to relieve most of the NF1 symptoms. The proband was the first child of unaffected, nonconsanguineous parents. She developed multiple cafe-au-lait spots within the first year of life. Her language and motor development were mildly retarded, and she complained of incoordination throughout life. Around puberty, multiple cutaneous neurofibromas developed which worsened at the time of each of her 3 pregnancies. At the age of 31 years, routine MRI of the brain revealed multiple areas of increased T2 signal intensity in the midbrain and a small optic glioma. Because of recurrent paresthesias in her left leg, an MRI scan of the spine was done 2 years later which revealed multiple schwannomas within the vertebral foramina. The largest tumor in the lumbar region, with a volume of approximately 8 ml, was surgically removed. Histologically, there was no evidence of malignancy at that time. Eight months later, the patient suffered a relapse with rapid tumor growth. At the time of reoperation, the retroperitoneal tumor had reached a volume of 800 ml and showed numerous necrotic and anaplastic areas with a proliferation rate up to 60%. The patient died of widespread metastatic disease at the age of 34 years. Her 3 male children, ages 4, 8, and 12 years, all fulfilled the NF1 diagnostic criteria. The 2 elder sons were macrocephalic. Language and motor development of all children was retarded to a similar extent and on the same time scale as in their mother. A cranial MRI scan in the 2 elder brothers showed increased T2 signal intensities similar to those in their mother.


.0023   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, TYR489CYS
SNP: rs137854557, gnomAD: rs137854557, ClinVar: RCV000000382, RCV000492667, RCV000757556, RCV001009573, RCV001257527, RCV001813925, RCV002504731, RCV003460400, RCV004737131, RCV004783716

Among the 9 NF1 exon 10b mutations identified by Messiaen et al. (1999) in 232 unrelated patients with neurofibromatosis type I (162200), 2 were recurrent: an A-to-G transition at nucleotide 1466, resulting in a tyr489-to-cys substitution (Y489C), and a T-to-C transition at nucleotide 1523, resulting in a leu508-to-pro substitution (L508P; 613113.0024). The Y489C mutation caused skipping of the last 62 nucleotides of exon 10b, while the L508P mutation was undetectable by the protein truncation test.


.0024   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, LEU508PRO
SNP: rs137854558, ClinVar: RCV000000383

For discussion of the leu508-to-pro (L508P) mutation in the NF1 gene that was found in compound heterozygous state in patients with neurofibromatosis I (162200) by Messiaen et al. (1999), see 613113.0023.


.0025   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, IVS9DS, G-A, +1
SNP: rs267606603, ClinVar: RCV000000384, RCV001547975

In a patient with type I neurofibromatosis (NF1; 162200), Eisenbarth et al. (2000) identified a germline G-to-A transition at nucleotide 1260+1, the splice donor site of intron 9 of the NF1 gene, leading to the inclusion of 13 bp of intervening sequence into the NF1 messenger. The mutant allele was present in all tissues tested. In a neurofibroma from this patient, an additional C-to-T transition at nucleotide 4021 (Q1341X; 613113.0026), a presumed 'second hit' somatic mutation, was identified. Another neurofibroma from the same patient showed a C-to-T transition at nucleotide 4084 (R1362X; 613113.0027), a presumed further 'second hit' somatic mutation. Both somatic mutations led to premature stop codons in the NF1 message.


.0026   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I, SOMATIC

NF1, GLN1341TER
SNP: rs137854559, ClinVar: RCV000000385, RCV001810828

For discussion of the gln1341-to-ter (Q1341X) mutation in the NF1 gene that was found in a patient with type I neurofibromatosis (NF1; 162200) by Eisenbarth et al. (2000), see 613113.0025.


.0027   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I, SOMATIC

NF1, ARG1362TER
SNP: rs137854560, gnomAD: rs137854560, ClinVar: RCV000000372, RCV000483061, RCV000492495, RCV002504730

For discussion of the arg1362-to-ter (R1362X) mutation in the NF1 gene that was found in a patient with type I neurofibromatosis (NF1; 162200) by Eisenbarth et al. (2000), see 613113.0025.


.0028   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, FAMILIAL SPINAL

NF1, LEU2067PRO
SNP: rs137854561, ClinVar: RCV000000386, RCV002354144

In a patient with spinal neurofibromatosis but without cafe-au-lait macules (162210), Kaufmann et al. (2001) identified a leu2067-to-pro (L2067P) mutation in exon 33 of the NF1 gene. Her clinically unaffected 61-year-old father had the same NF1 mutation in his blood cells. Additional molecular investigations to exclude mosaicism were not feasible and additional clinical investigations through MRI scans could not be performed. The L2067P mutation yielded an unstable product of approximately 50% normal neurofibromin levels, indicating functional haploinsufficiency.


.0029   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, FAMILIAL SPINAL, INCLUDED
NF1, IVS31AS, A-G, -5
SNP: rs267606604, ClinVar: RCV000000387, RCV000000388, RCV001582455, RCV002316183, RCV004566663

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Fahsold et al. (2000) identified an A-to-G transition in the NF1 gene splice acceptor site of exon 31 (IVS31-5A-G), resulting in the addition of 4 bases to exon 32 and a premature stop codon at amino acid 1995.

In affected members of a family with spinal neurofibromatosis without cafe-au-lait macules (162210), Kaufmann et al. (2001) identified the exon 31 splice site mutation. Noting that the same mutation had been reported in a patient with classic NF1, the authors concluded that a modifying gene may compensate for some of the effects of neurofibromin deficiency. The splice site NF1 mutation resulted in instability of the neurofibromin protein.


.0030   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, DEL
ClinVar: RCV000000389

Upadhyaya et al. (2003) described a Portuguese family in which 3 members had clinical features of neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200) and each had a different underlying defect in the NF1 gene. A 12-year-old boy who had multiple cafe-au-lait spots on his trunk and legs as well as developmental delay had a heterozygous 1.5-Mb deletion including the entire NF1 gene. The mutation was associated with the maternally derived chromosomal haplotype. His 10-year-old brother, who exhibited multiple cafe-au-lait spots and macrocephaly but whose development was within the normal range, was heterozygous for a CGA-to-TGA transition in exon 22 of the NF1 gene, resulting in an arg1241-to-ter mutation (613113.0031). This mutation had previously been described; its recurrence was thought to have been mediated by 5-methylcytosine deamination because it occurred in a hypermutable CpG dinucleotide. The brothers' 26-year-old female first cousin once removed (a first cousin of their father) exhibited multiple cafe-au-lait spots, bilateral Lisch nodules, and multiple dermal neurofibromas. She also showed severe scoliosis and several plexiform neurofibromas in the clavicular region, but her development was within the normal range. She was found to carry a frameshift mutation, 5406insT (613113.0032), in exon 29 of the NF1 gene. None of the parents had any clinical evidence of NF1 and none had a mutation in the NF1 gene. There was also no evidence of mosaicism. Upadhyaya et al. (2003) speculated about the mechanism of this unusual situation.


.0031   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, ARG1241TER
SNP: rs137854562, ClinVar: RCV000000390, RCV000129869, RCV000578991, RCV003466769, RCV004668705, RCV004737132

For discussion of the arg1241-to-ter (R1241X) mutation in the NF1 gene that was found in heterozygous state in 1 of 3 members of a family with clinical features of neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200) by Upadhyaya et al. (2003), see 613113.0030.

Fahsold et al. (2000) described a CGA-to-TGA transition in the NF1 gene, resulting in an R1241X mutation, as the cause of neurofibromatosis type I.


.0032   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, 1-BP INS, 5406T
SNP: rs267606605, ClinVar: RCV000000391, RCV000492318, RCV002272259

For discussion of the 1-bp insertion (5406insT) in the NF1 gene that was found in heterozygous state in 1 of 3 members of a family with clinical features of neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200) by Upadhyaya et al. (2003), see 613113.0030.


.0033   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS-NOONAN SYNDROME

WATSON SYNDROME, INCLUDED
NF1, 3-BP DEL, 2970AAT
SNP: rs267606606, gnomAD: rs267606606, ClinVar: RCV000000392, RCV000000393, RCV000196290, RCV000215737, RCV000384725, RCV002496217, RCV003162200, RCV003466770

Carey et al. (1997) described a 3-bp deletion in exon 17 of the NF1 gene in affected members of a family with neurofibromatosis-Noonan syndrome (NFNS; 601321). The 2970delAAT mutation resulted in deletion of met991. The clinical features of the 3 subjects were tabulated by De Luca et al. (2005). Stevenson et al. (2006) reported a follow-up of this family.

Upadhyaya et al. (2007) reported this mutation in 47 affected individuals from 21 unrelated families with a similar phenotype, lacking cutaneous neurofibromas or clinically obvious plexiform neurofibromas. One of the families had been reported by Stevenson et al. (2006); another was reported by Castle et al. (2003) and had a diagnosis of Watson syndrome (WTSN; 193520). The in-frame 3-bp deletion in exon 17 was predicted to result in the loss of 1 of 2 adjacent methionines, either codon 991 or codon 992, in conjunction with a silent ACA-to-ACG change of codon 990. These 2 methionine residues are located in a highly conserved region of neurofibromin and are expected, therefore, to have a functional role in the protein. This was said to have been the first study to correlate a specific small mutation of the NF1 gene with the expression of a particular clinical phenotype.

Koczkowska et al. (2019) performed a standardized phenotypic assessment on 135 individuals from 103 unrelated families carrying the NF1 p.Met992del mutation. None of the individuals had externally visible plexiform or histopathologically confirmed cutaneous or subcutaneous neurofibromas. None had optic gliomas or symptomatic spinal neurofibromas; however, 4.8% of individuals had nonoptic brain tumors, mostly low-grade and asymptomatic, and 38.8% had cognitive impairment/learning disabilities. Of 119 patients evaluated, 15 (12.6%) had Noonan-like features. The authors concluded that NF patients carrying this variant have a mild NF1 phenotype lacking clinically suspected plexiform, cutaneous, or subcutaneous neurofibromas. However, learning difficulties are clearly part of the phenotypic presentation.


.0034   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS-NOONAN SYNDROME

NF1, 3-BP DEL, 4312GAA
SNP: rs267606607, ClinVar: RCV000000394, RCV000544772, RCV002326657, RCV003156210, RCV003466771, RCV004547452

In a patient with neurofibromatosis-Noonan syndrome (NFNS; 601321), Baralle et al. (2003) identified a 3-bp deletion, 4312delGAA, in exon 25 of the NF1 gene. The patient was a 6-year-old boy with more than 6 cafe-au-lait macules. There were no other features of neurofibromatosis type I, but his mother had a single cafe-au-lait macule and Lisch nodules, low hairline, and short neck. He had ptosis, epicanthal folds, low posterior hairline, and low-set ears. On echocardiogram he had pulmonic stenosis. No neurofibromas were present.


.0035   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS-NOONAN SYNDROME

NF1, 2-BP INS, 4095TG
SNP: rs267606608, ClinVar: RCV000000395

In a patient with neurofibromatosis-Noonan syndrome (NFNS; 601321), Baralle et al. (2003) identified a 2-bp insertion, 4095insTG, in exon 23-2 of the NF1 gene. The patient was a 20-year-old man with 7 cafe-au-lait macules, axillary freckling, 10 neurofibromas, Lisch nodules, and scoliosis with a structural cervical vertebral abnormality. He had downslanting palpebral fissures, ptosis, a short, broad neck, widely spaced nipples, and an atrial septal defect. He was of short stature and needed extra help in mainstream school. There was no family history of similar findings.


.0036   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS TYPE 1

NF1, 20075G-A, 20076C-A
SNP: rs267606609, ClinVar: RCV000000396

In a patient with severe neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Colapietro et al. (2003) found a G-to-A transition and a C-to-A transversion at nucleotide positions 57 and 58, respectively, of the 154-bp long NF1 exon 7, neither of which was present in the proband's parents or 50 healthy controls. RT-PCR analysis showed the expected fragment from exon 4b to 8 together with a shortened one with in-frame skipping of exon 7. Direct sequencing of genomic DNA revealed 2 exonic heterozygous changes at nucleotides 20075 (G-A transition) and 20076 (C-A transversion), which belong to contiguous codons. The first substitution occurred in the third base of the codon, changing it from CAG to CAA, both encoding glutamine (Q315Q); the second changed the CTG codon for leucine to the ATG codon for methionine (L316M). The use of previously established sequence matrices for the scoring of putative ESE motifs showed that the adjacent silent and missense mutations were located within highly conserved overlapping stretches of 7 nucleotides with a close similarity to the ESE-specific consensus sequences recognized by the SC35 (600813) and SF2/ASF (600812) arginine/serine-rich (SR) proteins. The combined occurrence of both consecutive alterations decreased the motif score for both SR proteins below their threshold levels. As the aberrant transcript was consistently expressed, a protein lacking 58 amino acids was predicted. Thus, the contiguous internal exon 7 mutations appear to have caused exon 7 skipping as a result of the missplicing caused by abrogation of functional ESEs (see Cartegni et al. (2002) and Fairbrother et al. (2002)). The male proband in the study of Colapietro et al. (2003) was the third child of healthy unrelated parents. At the age of 1 year, he underwent uronephrectomy because of right renal dysplasia. At the age of 3 years, an optic glioma was identified and surgically excised. The diagnosis of NF1 was made when he was 9 years old on the basis of the presence of cafe-au-lait spots, optic glioma, and Lisch nodules of the iris. Cerebral MRI at the age of 11 years revealed multiple hamartomas and a right hemisphere cerebral venous angioma. The patient showed borderline mental retardation, a height in the 10th percentile, and an occipitofrontal head circumference in the 97th percentile. At the age of 20 years, he showed macrocephaly, numerous cafe-au-lait spots, small cutaneous neurofibromas, a plexiform neck neurofibroma, and axillary and inguinal freckling. Scoliosis, winged scapulae, and bilateral genu valgum were also present.


.0037   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, 1-BP DEL, 3775T
SNP: rs1567852567, ClinVar: RCV000000397

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Maris et al. (2002) identified a 1-bp deletion in the NF1 gene, 3775delT. The mutation was not present in the patient's parents.

Mosse et al. (2004) showed that the patient originally described by Maris et al. (2002) also had neuroblastoma (256700) and Hirschsprung disease (142623), which were caused by a 1-bp deletion in the PHOX2B gene (676delG; 603851.0007).


.0038   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, FAMILIAL SPINAL, INCLUDED
NF1, LEU357PRO
SNP: rs137854563, ClinVar: RCV000000398, RCV000000399, RCV002476903, RCV002496218

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), Fahsold et al. (2000) identified a 1070T-C transition in exon 8 of the NF1 gene, resulting in a leu357-to-pro (L357P) substitution.

In 7 affected members of a family with spinal neurofibromatosis (162210) originally reported by Poyhonen et al. (1997), Messiaen et al. (2003) identified the L357P mutation. The mutation was not detected in 200 normal chromosomes.


.0039   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, FAMILIAL SPINAL

NF1, IVS39DS, A-C, +3
SNP: rs267606610, ClinVar: RCV000000400

In affected members of a family with spinal neurofibromatosis (NF1; 162210) originally reported by Pulst et al. (1991), Messiaen et al. (2003) identified an A-to-C transversion at position +3 of the donor splice site of exon 39 of the NF1 gene (7126+3A-C), resulting in the skipping of exon 39.


.0040   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, 1-BP DEL, 4071C
ClinVar: RCV000000401

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200) who had onset of neurofibromatous neuropathy at the age of 42 years, Ferner et al. (2004) identified a 1-bp deletion (4071delC) in exon 23.2 of the NF1 gene, resulting in a premature stop codon. The deletion was predicted to generate a truncated neurofibromin of 1,383 amino acids. Neuroimaging studies showed the presence of multiple spinal nerve root neurofibromas. A high-grade malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor (MPNST) had been removed from the left iliac fossa previously, with no recurrence. Benign flexiform neurofibroma was present in the left abdominal wall.


.0041   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, LEU1243PRO
SNP: rs137854564, ClinVar: RCV000000402, RCV000680822

In a patient with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200) who had onset of neurofibromatous neuropathy at the age of 17 years, Ferner et al. (2004) identified a 1243T-C transition in the NF1 gene, resulting in a leu1243-to-pro (L1243P) substitution.


.0042   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, GLU1904TER
SNP: rs137854565, ClinVar: RCV000000403

By cDNA-based mutation detection analysis, Zatkova et al. (2004) studied 7 nonsense or missense alleles of NF1 that caused exon skipping and showed that disruption of exonic splicing enhancer (ESE) elements was responsible. One of the 7 mutations was a novel nonsense mutation, a 5719G-T transversion, resulting in a glu1904-to-ter (G1904X) substitution in exon 30. The phenotype was neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200).


.0043   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, LEU844ARG
SNP: rs137854566, gnomAD: rs137854566, ClinVar: RCV000000404

Bertola et al. (2005) described a 14-year-old girl with neurofibromatosis type I (NF1; 162200), caused by a de novo mutation in the NF1 gene, and Noonan syndrome (163950), caused by a mutation in the PTPN11 gene (176876.0023) inherited from her father. The NF1 mutation was a 2531A-G transition resulting in a leu844-to-arg substitution. The proband had pulmonary stenosis and aortic coarctation requiring surgery and also had a pilocytic astrocytoma in the suprasellar region involving the optic chiasm and forming the third ventricle. She had cafe-au-lait spots and axillary freckling typical of neurofibromatosis and marked hypertelorism characteristic of Noonan syndrome.


.0044   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, IVS27DS, G-C, +1
SNP: rs1555619056, ClinVar: RCV000000405, RCV004791184

In a mother and son with a mild form of neurofibromatosis I (NF1; 162200), Thiel et al. (2009) identified a heterozygous mutation (4661+1G-C) in intron 27 of the NF1 gene, resulting in the skipping of exon 27a and potentially affecting the GAP-related domain. Both patients had cafe-au-lait spots and mild myopia, but no neurofibromas, Lisch nodules, or optic gliomas. The daughter of the mother, who also carried the NF1 mutation, was found to be compound heterozygous with a mutation in the PTPN11 gene (T2I; 176876.0027). In addition to features of neurofibromatosis I, she also had features of Noonan syndrome (163950), including hypertelorism, low-set ears, poor growth, sternal deformity, valvular pulmonic stenosis, and delayed development. The PTPN11 mutation was predicted to destabilize the inactive form of PTPN11, resulting in increased basal activity and a gain of function. The girl also developed bilateral optic gliomas before age 2 years, which may be explained by an additive effect of both the NF1 and PTPN11 mutations on the Ras pathway. Compound heterozygosity for mutations in NF1 and PTPN11 were also reported by Bertola et al. (2005) in a patient with a combination of neurofibromatosis I and Noonan syndrome.


.0045   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS-NOONAN SYNDROME

NF1, LEU1390PHE
SNP: rs199474789, ClinVar: RCV000023983, RCV000059194, RCV000195735

In affected members of a 5-generation family with neurofibromatosis-Noonan syndrome (NFNS; 601321), Nystrom et al. (2009) identified a heterozygous 4168C-T transition in exon 24 of the NF1 gene, resulting in a leu1390-to-phe (L1390F) substitution in the highly conserved GAP-related domain. The family was originally reported by Ahlbom et al. (1995) as having Noonan syndrome based on dysmorphic facial features, short stature, pulmonary stenosis, and short neck. Upon reevaluation, Nystrom et al. (2009) found that several family members had cafe-au-lait spots, axillary freckling, Lisch nodules, and multiple nevi, consistent with NF1, but that all family members lacked dermal and superficial plexiform neurofibromas. The authors concluded that the clinical diagnosis was consistent with NFNS. Nystrom et al. (2009) postulated that the L1390F mutation resulted in impaired GTPase activity.


.0046   NEUROFIBROMATOSIS, TYPE I

NF1, ARG192TER
SNP: rs397514641, gnomAD: rs397514641, ClinVar: RCV000033171, RCV000442381, RCV000626737, RCV001003806, RCV002310996, RCV003231110, RCV003460540, RCV004798752, RCV005016317

In a girl with aniridia, microphthalmia, microcephaly, and cafe-au-lait macules, Henderson et al. (2007) identified heterozygosity for a 574C-T transition in exon 4b of the NF1 gene, resulting in an arg192-to-ter (R192X) substitution, as well as heterozygous mutations in the PAX6 (R38W; 607108.0026) and OTX2 (Y179X; 600037.0004) genes. Her mother, who carried the NF1 and PAX6 mutations, had NF1 (162200) with the typical eye defects of retinal fibroma, optic nerve glioma, and gross Lisch nodules on the iris; in addition, although her eyes were of normal size, she had eyes were of normal size, she had small corneas, and also had cataracts, optic nerve hypoplasia, nystagmus, and mild iris stromal hypoplasia with normal-sized pupils. The proband's father, who had multiple ocular defects (MCOPS5; 610125), had previously been studied by Ragge et al. (2005) and was heterozygous for the OTX2 nonsense mutation. Henderson et al. (2007) noted that the proband's phenotype was surprisingly mild, given that mutations in PAX6, OTX2, or NF1 can cause a variety of severe developmental defects.


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Contributors:
Ada Hamosh - updated : 03/04/2020
Paul J. Converse - updated : 4/29/2016
Paul J. Converse - updated : 3/3/2016
Marla J. F. O'Neill - updated : 2/22/2013
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 12/23/2010
Cassandra L. Kniffin - updated : 11/8/2010
George E. Tiller - updated : 6/23/2010
Patricia A. Hartz - updated : 3/18/2010

Creation Date:
Carol A. Bocchini : 11/6/2009

Edit History:
alopez : 05/01/2024
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carol : 8/18/2015
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terry : 11/13/2012
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wwang : 7/1/2010
terry : 6/23/2010
carol : 5/25/2010
alopez : 4/30/2010
carol : 4/9/2010
mgross : 3/18/2010
terry : 3/18/2010
carol : 12/1/2009
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carol : 11/23/2009
ckniffin : 11/17/2009
ckniffin : 11/17/2009
terry : 11/9/2009
terry : 11/9/2009
carol : 11/6/2009