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ARMAN, AHMET

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ARMAN

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AHMET

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Now showing 1 - 7 of 7
  • Publication
    Enostosis in a patient with KBG syndrome caused by a novel missense ANKRD11 variant
    (2022-07-01) GEÇKİNLİ, BİLGEN BİLGE; ALAVANDA, CEREN; ARMAN, AHMET; GEÇKİNLİ B. B., ALAVANDA C., Ates E. A., Yildirim O., ARMAN A.
    KBG syndrome (KBGS-OMIM:#148050) is a rare autosomal dominant disease characterized by short stature, intellectual disability, characteristic facies, skeletal anomalies and macrodontia that most commonly affect the permanent upper central incisors. In 2011, Sirmaci et al. (2011) identified heterozygous loss-of-function variants in the ANKRD11 gene on chromosome 16q24.3. So far, more than 150 patients have been reported in the literature. ANKRD11 gene encodes ankyrin repeat domain-containing protein 11 that regulates transcriptional activation (Zhang et al., 2004). Apart from single-nucleotide variations in the ANKRD11 gene, copy number variations on chromosome 16q24.3 can also cause KBG syndrome-like phenotype. In this study, we present a patient with de-novo novel missense variant in ANKRD11 gene. We have also identified skeletal bone enostosis as an additional finding, which is not previously reported.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Novel, homozygous RAB3GAP1 c.2606 + 1G>A, p.Glu830ValfsTer9 variant and chromosome 3q29 duplication in a Turkish individual with Warburg micro syndrome
    (2023-04-01) ALAVANDA, CEREN; SÖYLEMEZ, MEHMET ALİ; ARMAN, AHMET; Geckinli B., TÜRKYILMAZ A., ALAVANDA C., Sager G., Arslan Ates E., SÖYLEMEZ M. A., ARMAN A.
    Warburg micro syndrome (WARBM) is a rare, autosomal recessive, neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by microcephaly, cortical dysplasia, corpus callosum hypoplasia, congenital hypotonia leading to subsequent spastic quadriplegia, severe developmental delay and hypogenitalism. Ophthalmologic findings that may affect any ocular segment including characteristic, small, atonic pupils. WARBM is known to be caused by biallelic, pathogenic variants in at least five genes although additional genetic loci may exist. The RAB3GAP1 c.748 + 1G>A, p.Asp250CysfsTer24 founder variant has been described in families of Turkish ancestry. We report the clinical and molecular findings in three, unrelated, Turkish families with WARBM. A novel c.974-2A>G variant causing WARBM in three siblings of Turkish descent was found. Functional studies of the novel, c.2606 + 1G>A variant in patients\" mRNA revealed skipping of exon 22 which results in a premature stop codon in exon 23. However, the clinical consequences of this variant are blended given that the individual also had a maternally inherited chromosome 3q29 microduplication.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Dysosteosclerosis: Clinical and radiological evolution reflecting genetic heterogeneity
    (2022-08-01) DEMİRCİOĞLU, SERAP; GÜRPINAR TOSUN, BUŞRA; GÜRAN, TÜLAY; BEREKET, ABDULLAH; ALAVANDA, CEREN; ARMAN, AHMET; DEMİRCİOĞLU S., Mumm S., ALAVANDA C., Kaygusuz B. S., GÜRPINAR TOSUN B., ARMAN A., Huskey M., GÜRAN T., Duan S., BEREKET A., et al.
    Dysosteosclerosis (DSS), the term coined in 1968 for ultrarare dysplasia of the skeleton featuring platyspondyly with focal appendicular osteosclerosis, has become generic by encompassing the genetic heterogeneity recently reported for this phenotype. We studied four unrelated Turkish patients with DSS to advance understanding of the new nosology. Patient 1 suffered femur fractures beginning at age 1 year. DSS was suspected from marked metaphyseal osteosclerosis in early childhood and subsequently platyspondyly accompanying patchy osteosclerosis of her appendicular skeleton. She harbored in SLC29A3, in 2012 the first gene associated with DSS, a unique homozygous duplication (c.303_320dup, p.102_107dupYFESYL). Patient 2 presented similarly with fractures and metaphyseal osteosclerosis but with no platyspondyly at age 2 months. She was homozygous for a novel nonsense mutation in SLC29A3 (c.1284C>G, p.Tyr428*). Patient 3 had ocular disease at age 2 years, presented for short stature at age 11 years, and did not begin to fracture until age 16 years. Radiographs showed mild platyspondyly and focal metaphyseal and femoral osteosclerosis. She was homozygous for a unique splice site mutation in TNFRSF11A (c.616+3A>G). Patient 4 at age 2 years manifested developmental delay and frequent infections but did not fracture. He had unique metadiaphyseal splaying and osteosclerosis, vertebral end-plate osteosclerosis, and cortical thinning of long bones but no mutation was detected of SLC29A3, TNFRSF11A, TCIRG1, LRRK1, or CSF1R associated with DSS. We find that DSS from defective SLC29A3 presents earliest and with fractures. DSS from compromised TNFRSF11A can lead to optic atrophy as an early finding. Negative mutation analysis in patient 4 suggests further genetic heterogeneity underlying the skeletal phenotype of DSS. (c) 2022 The Authors. JBMR Plus published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
  • Publication
    Molecular analysis of MKRN3 gene in Turkish girls with sporadic and familial idiopathic central
    (2023-03-01) KIRKGÖZ, TARIK; KAYGUSUZ, SARE BETÜL; ALAVANDA, CEREN; GÜRPINAR TOSUN, BUŞRA; ELTAN, MEHMET; SEVEN MENEVŞE, TUBA; GÜRAN, TÜLAY; ARMAN, AHMET; DEMİRCİOĞLU, SERAP; BEREKET, ABDULLAH; KIRKGÖZ T., KAYGUSUZ S. B., ALAVANDA C., Helvacioglu D., Abali Z. Y., GÜRPINAR TOSUN B., ELTAN M., SEVEN MENEVŞE T., GÜRAN T., ARMAN A., et al.
    Objectives: Central precocious puberty (CPP) develops as a result of early stimulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis. The loss-of-function mutations in the Makorin-ring-finger3 (MKRN3) gene appear to be the most common molecular cause of familial CPP. We aimed to identify MKRN3 gene mutations in our CPP cohort and to investigate the frequency of MKRN3 mutations.Methods: 102 patients with CPP included. 53 of them had family history of CPP in the first and/or second-degree relatives. MKRN3 gene was analyzed by next-generation sequencing.Results: Possible pathogenic variants were found in 2/53 patients with family history of CPP (3.8%) and 1/49 patient without family history (2%). A novel heterozygous c.1A > G (p.Met1Val) mutation, a novel heterozygous c.683_684delCA (p.Ser228*) and a previously reported c.482dupC (Ala162Glyfs*) frameshift variations were detected. The two novel variants are predicted to be pathogenic in silico analyses.Conclusions: In our cohort, possible pathogenic variants in MKRN3 gene were detected in 2.9% of the total cohort, 3.8% of the familial and 2% of the nonfamilial cases, slightly lower than that reported in the literature. Two novel variants detected contribute to the molecular repertoire of MKRN3 defects in CPP. Classical pattern of paternal inheritance has been demonstrated in all three cases. However, the father of the patient 3 did not have history of CPP suggesting that the father inherited this variant from his mother and had phenotype skipping. Therefore, we emphasize that the absence of history of CPP in the father does not exclude the possibility of a MKRN3 mutation.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Clinical and molecular evaluation of MEFV gene variants in the Turkish population: a study by the National Genetics Consortium
    (2022-06-01) ARMAN, AHMET; GEÇKİNLİ, BİLGEN BİLGE; DÜNDAR M., FAHRİOGLU U., Yildiz S. H., Bakir-Gungor B., TEMEL Ş. G., AKIN H., ARTAN S., Cora T., ŞAHİN F. İ., DURSUN A., et al.
    Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is a monogenic autoinflammatory disorder with recurrent fever, abdominal pain, serositis, articular manifestations, erysipelas-like erythema, and renal complications as its main features. Caused by the mutations in the MEditerranean FeVer (MEFV) gene, it mainly affects people of Mediterranean descent with a higher incidence in the Turkish, Jewish, Arabic, and Armenian populations. As our understanding of FMF improves, it becomes clearer that we are facing with a more complex picture of FMF with respect to its pathogenesis, penetrance, variant type (gain-of-function vs. loss-of-function), and inheritance. In this study, MEFV gene analysis results and clinical findings of 27,504 patients from 35 universities and institutions in Turkey and Northern Cyprus are combined in an effort to provide a better insight into the genotype-phenotype correlation and how a specific variant contributes to certain clinical findings in FMF patients. Our results may help better understand this complex disease and how the genotype may sometimes contribute to phenotype. Unlike many studies in the literature, our study investigated a broader symptomatic spectrum and the relationship between the genotype and phenotype data. In this sense, we aimed to guide all clinicians and academicians who work in this field to better establish a comprehensive data set for the patients. One of the biggest messages of our study is that lack of uniformity in some clinical and demographic data of participants may become an obstacle in approaching FMF patients and understanding this complex disease.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    First patient diagnosed as feingold syndrome type 2 with alport syndrome and review of the current literature
    (2022-12-01) ARMAN, AHMET; ATA, PINAR; SÖYLEMEZ, MEHMET ALİ; Demir S., SÖYLEMEZ M. A., ARMAN A., ATA P.
    Introduction: Feingold syndrome type 2 (FGLDS2) is an ultra-rare genetic disorder characterized by short stature, microcephaly, digital abnormalities, and intellectual disability. Until now, 22 patients have been reported in the literature. FGLDS2 is caused by a germline heterozygous deletion of 13q resulting in haploinsufficiency of the MIR17HG gene. Case report: In the present study, we evaluated clinical, radiological, and genetic analyses of a 10-year-old Turkish-origin girl with short stature, brachydactyly, intellectual disability, hematuria, and proteinuria. Conclusion/Discussion: In the array-CGH analysis, a 15.7-Mb deletion, arr[hg19] 13q22q31.3(78,241,132_93,967,288)x1, was detected, and this alteration was evaluated to be pathogenic. The deletion of this region covering the MIR17HG gene is a potential cause of FGLDS2. Also, at her clinical exome sequencing study, a heterozygous c.2023G>A p.(Gly675Ser) variation was detected in the COL4A5 gene (NM_000495.4) that was likely pathogenic in up-to-date databases. As a result, we report on a patient who has FGLDS2 and Alport syndrome. This is the first report of a Turkish-origin FGLDS2 patient. Reporting new cases expands the range of phenotypes, plays a crucial role in understanding the FGLDS2 pathogenesis, and is important in terms of screening at-risk family members for giving appropriate genetic counseling and preimplantation genetic diagnosis opportunities.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Two new cases with novel pathogenic variants reflecting the clinical diversity of Schaaf-Yang syndrome
    (2023-01-01) ALAVANDA, CEREN; GEÇKİNLİ, BİLGEN BİLGE; DEMİRCİOĞLU, SERAP; ARMAN, AHMET; ALAVANDA C., Arslan Ateş E., Yavaş Abalı Z., GEÇKİNLİ B. B., DEMİRCİOĞLU S., ARMAN A.
    Schaaf-Yang syndrome (SHFYNG) is a rare pleiotropic disorder, characterized by hypotonia, joint contractures, autism spectrum disorders (ASD), and developmental delay/intellectual disability. Although it shares some common features with Prader-Willi Syndrome, joint contractures, and ASD were more commonly detected in in this syndrome. Recently, it was shown that truncating variants in the paternal allele of the MAGEL2 gene cause SHFYNG. Here, we present two patients diagnosed with SHFYNG syndrome having two different novel truncating variants in the MAGEL2 gene, one paternally inherited and one de novo. One patient had obesity, brachydactyly and dysmorphic features, and the other patient presented with contractures, severe hypotonia and early death. This is the first report of Turkish SHFYNG syndrome cases presented to emphasize the phenotypic diversity of the syndrome.