- Arboleda, Valerie A;
- Lee, Hane;
- Parnaik, Rahul;
- Fleming, Alice;
- Banerjee, Abhik;
- Ferraz-de-Souza, Bruno;
- Délot, Emmanuèle C;
- Rodriguez-Fernandez, Imilce A;
- Braslavsky, Debora;
- Bergadá, Ignacio;
- Dell'Angelica, Esteban C;
- Nelson, Stanley F;
- Martinez-Agosto, Julian A;
- Achermann, John C;
- Vilain, Eric
IMAGe syndrome (intrauterine growth restriction, metaphyseal dysplasia, adrenal hypoplasia congenita and genital anomalies) is an undergrowth developmental disorder with life-threatening consequences. An identity-by-descent analysis in a family with IMAGe syndrome identified a 17.2-Mb locus on chromosome 11p15 that segregated in the affected family members. Targeted exon array capture of the disease locus, followed by high-throughput genomic sequencing and validation by dideoxy sequencing, identified missense mutations in the imprinted gene CDKN1C (also known as P57KIP2) in two familial and four unrelated patients. A familial analysis showed an imprinted mode of inheritance in which only maternal transmission of the mutation resulted in IMAGe syndrome. CDKN1C inhibits cell-cycle progression, and we found that targeted expression of IMAGe-associated CDKN1C mutations in Drosophila caused severe eye growth defects compared to wild-type CDKN1C, suggesting a gain-of-function mechanism. All IMAGe-associated mutations clustered in the PCNA-binding domain of CDKN1C and resulted in loss of PCNA binding, distinguishing them from the mutations of CDKN1C that cause Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome, an overgrowth syndrome.