Entry - #608864 - OROFACIAL CLEFT 6, SUSCEPTIBILITY TO; OFC6 - OMIM
# 608864

OROFACIAL CLEFT 6, SUSCEPTIBILITY TO; OFC6


Alternative titles; symbols

CLEFT LIP WITH OR WITHOUT CLEFT PALATE, NONSYNDROMIC, 6


Phenotype-Gene Relationships

Location Phenotype Phenotype
MIM number
Inheritance Phenotype
mapping key
Gene/Locus Gene/Locus
MIM number
1q32.2 {Orofacial cleft 6} 608864 AD 3 IRF6 607199
Clinical Synopsis
 
Phenotypic Series
 

INHERITANCE
- Autosomal dominant
HEAD & NECK
Mouth
- Cleft lip, isolated
- Cleft palate, isolated
- Cleft lip and cleft palate
MISCELLANEOUS
- Genetic heterogeneity (see OFC1, 119530)
- Allelic disorder to van der Woude syndrome (VWS, 119300) and popliteal pterygium syndrome (PPS, 119500)
MOLECULAR BASIS
- Susceptibility conferred by mutation in the interferon regulatory factor 6 gene (IRF6, 607199.0013)

TEXT

A number sign (#) is used with this entry because of evidence that susceptibility to orofacial cleft-6 (OFC6) is conferred by variation in an enhancer of the IRF6 gene (607199) on chromosome 1q32.


Description

Orofacial cleft-6 (OFD6) is characterized by isolated cleft lip or cleft palate or by cleft lip and cleft palate (Rahimov et al., 2008; Pan et al., 2010).

For a phenotypic description and a discussion of genetic heterogeneity of nonsyndromic CL/P, see 119530.


Mapping

In van der Woude syndrome (VWS; 119300), lower lip pits are associated with CL/P or cleft palate only. Since none of these traits is present in all persons who carry the VWS mutation, some individual or familial VWS cases, especially those lacking lip pits, are indiscernible from nonsyndromic CL/P, raising the question of whether allelic variation at the VWS locus could underlie nonsyndromic CL/P. By linkage studies, Hecht et al. (1992) excluded the region of chromosome 1q which carries the van der Woude syndrome as the site of the mutation in this disorder and in isolated cleft palate. Houdayer et al. (2001) could find no evidence for linkage of nonsyndromic CL/P to the VWS locus on 1q32. However, in a parametric analysis using the transmission/disequilibrium test in 106 nonsyndromic CL/P triads (both parents and a child), they found a significant p value of 0.04 for D1S205, supporting involvement of the VWS locus in nonsyndromic CL/P in a complex, modifying/polygenic manner rather than as a monogenic major disease locus.

In a group of 6,755 members from 1,968 families in which at least 1 person had isolated CL/P, Zucchero et al. (2004) found significant association with the V allele at a V274I polymorphism (rs2235371) in the IRF6 gene. Variation at IRF6 was responsible for 12% of the genetic contribution to cleft lip or palate and tripled the risk of recurrence in families that already had 1 affected child. Zucchero et al. (2004) noted that their findings suggested that the V allele itself was not causal.

Scapoli et al. (2005) investigated 4 markers spanning the IRF6 locus, using the transmission disequilibrium test in a sample of 219 Italian triads of patients and their parents. Strong evidence of linkage disequilibrium was found between markers and disease in both single-allele (rs2235375; P = 0.002) and haplotype (P = 0.0005) analyses in that disease. These findings confirmed the contribution of IRF6 in the etiology of nonsyndromic cleft lip and palate and strongly supported its involvement in populations of European ancestry.

In 51 multiplex families and 184 simplex parent-child trios with nonsyndromic cleft lip and palate and 21 parent-child trios with a positive family history, Blanton et al. (2005) examined the same SNPs as Scapoli et al. (2005) and also detected an altered transmission of IRF6 alleles. Blanton et al. (2005) suggested that IRF6 plays a role in nonsyndromic cleft lip and palate.

Vieira et al. (2007) investigated 172 mother-affected child pairs from the Latin American Collaborative Study of Congenital Malformations (ECLMAC) study for an association of nonsyndromic cleft lip and palate and IRF6. The ECLMAC population was included in the original IRF6 association study published by Zucchero et al. (2004), but no association was detected. Vieira et al. (2007) separated patients with mitochondrial DNA haplotype D (more frequent in Native American subgroups) from other mitochondrial subtypes. An association of IRF6 (specifically the allelic variant V274I) and oral facial cleft was found in patients with mitochondrial haplotypes other than haplotype D. Vieira et al. (2007) suggested that the association of nonsyndromic oral facial cleft and IRF6 in South Americans relates to ancestral origin.


Molecular Genetics

Rahimov et al. (2008) found that the A allele of a common SNP (rs642961, G-A) in an IRF6 enhancer within the 5-prime untranslated region of the IRF6 gene was significantly overtransmitted (p = 1 x 10(-11)) in families with nonsyndromic cleft lip/palate, particularly in those with cleft lip only. There was a dosage effect of the A allele, with a relative risk for cleft lip of 1.68 for the AG genotype and 2.40 for the AA genotype.

In a hospital-based case-control study of 134 Han Chinese patients with nonsyndromic orofacial clefting (NSOC) and 115 controls matched for age, sex, and residential area, Pan et al. (2010) genotyped 2 polymorphisms in the IRF6 gene, rs2235371 and rs642961. In single-locus analyses, they found that the rs642961 AG and AG/AA genotypes were associated with increased risk of NSOC, especially cleft lip with or without cleft palate (CL/P) and cleft lip with cleft palate (CLP), whereas significantly decreased risks were associated with rs2235371 CT and CT/TT genotypes. In combined analysis using the rs642961 A allele and the rs2235371 C allele as the risk alleles, Pan et al. (2010) found that genotypes containing 2 to 4 risk alleles conferred high risk for NSOC, CL/P, and CLP (odds ratios of 2.15, 2.06, and 2.66, respectively). Analysis of lip skin tissue adjacent to the cleft revealed that rs642961 genotypes were associated with differential levels of IRF6 mRNA and protein expression in an allele-dosage manner. Pan et al. (2010) concluded that IRF6 genetic variants contribute to the etiology of NSOC in the Han Chinese population.


REFERENCES

  1. Blanton, S. H., Cortez, A., Stal, S., Mulliken, J. B., Finnell, R. H., Hecht, J. T. Variation in IRF6 contributes to nonsyndromic cleft lip and palate. Am. J. Med. Genet. 137A: 259-262, 2005. [PubMed: 16096995, related citations] [Full Text]

  2. Hecht, J. T., Wang, Y., Blanton, S. H., Daiger, S. P. Van der Woude syndrome and nonsyndromic cleft lip and palate. (Letter) Am. J. Hum. Genet. 51: 442-444, 1992. [PubMed: 1642245, related citations]

  3. Houdayer, C., Bonaiti-Pellie, C., Erguy, C., Soupre, V., Dondon, M.-G., Burglen, L., Cougoureux, E., Couderc, R., Vazquez, M.-P., Bahuau, M. Possible relationship between the van der Woude syndrome (vWS) locus and nonsyndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate (NSCL/P). Am. J. Med. Genet. 104: 86-92, 2001. [PubMed: 11746036, related citations] [Full Text]

  4. Pan, Y., Ma, J., Zhang, W., Du, Y., Niu, Y., Wang, M., Zhang, Z., Wang, L. IRF6 polymorphisms are associated with nonsyndromic orofacial clefts in a Chinese Han population. Am. J. Med. Genet. 152A: 2505-2511, 2010. [PubMed: 20799332, related citations] [Full Text]

  5. Rahimov, F., Marazita, M. L., Visel, A., Cooper, M. E., Hitchler, M. J., Rubini, M., Domann, F. E., Govil, M., Christensen, K., Bille, C., Melbye, M., Jugessur, A., and 11 others. Disruption of an AP-2-alpha binding site in an IRF6 enhancer is associated with cleft lip. Nature Genet. 40: 1341-1347, 2008. [PubMed: 18836445, images, related citations] [Full Text]

  6. Scapoli, L., Palmieri, A., Martinelli, M., Pezzetti, F., Carinci, P., Tognon, M., Carinci, F. Strong evidence of linkage disequilibrium between polymorphisms at the IRF6 locus and nonsyndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate, in an Italian population. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 76: 180-183, 2005. [PubMed: 15558496, related citations] [Full Text]

  7. Vieira, A. R., Cooper, M. E., Marazita, M. L., Orioli, I. M., Castilla, E. E. Interferon regulatory factor 6 (IRF6) is associated with oral-facial cleft in individuals that originate in South America. Am. J. Med. Genet. 143A: 2075-2078, 2007. [PubMed: 17702008, related citations] [Full Text]

  8. Zucchero, T. M., Cooper, M. E., Maher, B. S., Daack-Hirsch, S., Nepomuceno, B., Ribeiro, L., Caprau, D., Christensen, K., Suzuki, Y., Machida, J., Natsume, N., Yoshiura, K.-I., and 17 others. Interferon regulatory factor 6 (IRF6) gene variants and the risk of isolated cleft lip or palate. New Eng. J. Med. 351: 769-780, 2004. [PubMed: 15317890, related citations] [Full Text]


Marla J. F. O'Neill - updated : 12/16/2010
Marla J. F. O'Neill - updated : 6/16/2009
Marla J. F. O'Neill - updated : 11/24/2008
Kelly A. Przylepa - updated : 11/6/2007
Marla J. F. O'Neill - updated : 10/12/2005
Creation Date:
Cassandra L. Kniffin : 8/23/2004
carol : 02/07/2020
carol : 12/04/2017
carol : 02/04/2016
carol : 3/8/2013
alopez : 12/17/2010
terry : 12/16/2010
carol : 6/16/2009
alopez : 11/24/2008
carol : 11/6/2007
wwang : 10/12/2005
ckniffin : 10/12/2005
carol : 8/25/2004
carol : 8/25/2004
ckniffin : 8/23/2004

# 608864

OROFACIAL CLEFT 6, SUSCEPTIBILITY TO; OFC6


Alternative titles; symbols

CLEFT LIP WITH OR WITHOUT CLEFT PALATE, NONSYNDROMIC, 6


ORPHA: 199306;   DO: 0080593;  


Phenotype-Gene Relationships

Location Phenotype Phenotype
MIM number
Inheritance Phenotype
mapping key
Gene/Locus Gene/Locus
MIM number
1q32.2 {Orofacial cleft 6} 608864 Autosomal dominant 3 IRF6 607199

TEXT

A number sign (#) is used with this entry because of evidence that susceptibility to orofacial cleft-6 (OFC6) is conferred by variation in an enhancer of the IRF6 gene (607199) on chromosome 1q32.


Description

Orofacial cleft-6 (OFD6) is characterized by isolated cleft lip or cleft palate or by cleft lip and cleft palate (Rahimov et al., 2008; Pan et al., 2010).

For a phenotypic description and a discussion of genetic heterogeneity of nonsyndromic CL/P, see 119530.


Mapping

In van der Woude syndrome (VWS; 119300), lower lip pits are associated with CL/P or cleft palate only. Since none of these traits is present in all persons who carry the VWS mutation, some individual or familial VWS cases, especially those lacking lip pits, are indiscernible from nonsyndromic CL/P, raising the question of whether allelic variation at the VWS locus could underlie nonsyndromic CL/P. By linkage studies, Hecht et al. (1992) excluded the region of chromosome 1q which carries the van der Woude syndrome as the site of the mutation in this disorder and in isolated cleft palate. Houdayer et al. (2001) could find no evidence for linkage of nonsyndromic CL/P to the VWS locus on 1q32. However, in a parametric analysis using the transmission/disequilibrium test in 106 nonsyndromic CL/P triads (both parents and a child), they found a significant p value of 0.04 for D1S205, supporting involvement of the VWS locus in nonsyndromic CL/P in a complex, modifying/polygenic manner rather than as a monogenic major disease locus.

In a group of 6,755 members from 1,968 families in which at least 1 person had isolated CL/P, Zucchero et al. (2004) found significant association with the V allele at a V274I polymorphism (rs2235371) in the IRF6 gene. Variation at IRF6 was responsible for 12% of the genetic contribution to cleft lip or palate and tripled the risk of recurrence in families that already had 1 affected child. Zucchero et al. (2004) noted that their findings suggested that the V allele itself was not causal.

Scapoli et al. (2005) investigated 4 markers spanning the IRF6 locus, using the transmission disequilibrium test in a sample of 219 Italian triads of patients and their parents. Strong evidence of linkage disequilibrium was found between markers and disease in both single-allele (rs2235375; P = 0.002) and haplotype (P = 0.0005) analyses in that disease. These findings confirmed the contribution of IRF6 in the etiology of nonsyndromic cleft lip and palate and strongly supported its involvement in populations of European ancestry.

In 51 multiplex families and 184 simplex parent-child trios with nonsyndromic cleft lip and palate and 21 parent-child trios with a positive family history, Blanton et al. (2005) examined the same SNPs as Scapoli et al. (2005) and also detected an altered transmission of IRF6 alleles. Blanton et al. (2005) suggested that IRF6 plays a role in nonsyndromic cleft lip and palate.

Vieira et al. (2007) investigated 172 mother-affected child pairs from the Latin American Collaborative Study of Congenital Malformations (ECLMAC) study for an association of nonsyndromic cleft lip and palate and IRF6. The ECLMAC population was included in the original IRF6 association study published by Zucchero et al. (2004), but no association was detected. Vieira et al. (2007) separated patients with mitochondrial DNA haplotype D (more frequent in Native American subgroups) from other mitochondrial subtypes. An association of IRF6 (specifically the allelic variant V274I) and oral facial cleft was found in patients with mitochondrial haplotypes other than haplotype D. Vieira et al. (2007) suggested that the association of nonsyndromic oral facial cleft and IRF6 in South Americans relates to ancestral origin.


Molecular Genetics

Rahimov et al. (2008) found that the A allele of a common SNP (rs642961, G-A) in an IRF6 enhancer within the 5-prime untranslated region of the IRF6 gene was significantly overtransmitted (p = 1 x 10(-11)) in families with nonsyndromic cleft lip/palate, particularly in those with cleft lip only. There was a dosage effect of the A allele, with a relative risk for cleft lip of 1.68 for the AG genotype and 2.40 for the AA genotype.

In a hospital-based case-control study of 134 Han Chinese patients with nonsyndromic orofacial clefting (NSOC) and 115 controls matched for age, sex, and residential area, Pan et al. (2010) genotyped 2 polymorphisms in the IRF6 gene, rs2235371 and rs642961. In single-locus analyses, they found that the rs642961 AG and AG/AA genotypes were associated with increased risk of NSOC, especially cleft lip with or without cleft palate (CL/P) and cleft lip with cleft palate (CLP), whereas significantly decreased risks were associated with rs2235371 CT and CT/TT genotypes. In combined analysis using the rs642961 A allele and the rs2235371 C allele as the risk alleles, Pan et al. (2010) found that genotypes containing 2 to 4 risk alleles conferred high risk for NSOC, CL/P, and CLP (odds ratios of 2.15, 2.06, and 2.66, respectively). Analysis of lip skin tissue adjacent to the cleft revealed that rs642961 genotypes were associated with differential levels of IRF6 mRNA and protein expression in an allele-dosage manner. Pan et al. (2010) concluded that IRF6 genetic variants contribute to the etiology of NSOC in the Han Chinese population.


REFERENCES

  1. Blanton, S. H., Cortez, A., Stal, S., Mulliken, J. B., Finnell, R. H., Hecht, J. T. Variation in IRF6 contributes to nonsyndromic cleft lip and palate. Am. J. Med. Genet. 137A: 259-262, 2005. [PubMed: 16096995] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.a.30887]

  2. Hecht, J. T., Wang, Y., Blanton, S. H., Daiger, S. P. Van der Woude syndrome and nonsyndromic cleft lip and palate. (Letter) Am. J. Hum. Genet. 51: 442-444, 1992. [PubMed: 1642245]

  3. Houdayer, C., Bonaiti-Pellie, C., Erguy, C., Soupre, V., Dondon, M.-G., Burglen, L., Cougoureux, E., Couderc, R., Vazquez, M.-P., Bahuau, M. Possible relationship between the van der Woude syndrome (vWS) locus and nonsyndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate (NSCL/P). Am. J. Med. Genet. 104: 86-92, 2001. [PubMed: 11746036] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1002/1096-8628(20011115)104:1<86::aid-ajmg10053>3.0.co;2-e]

  4. Pan, Y., Ma, J., Zhang, W., Du, Y., Niu, Y., Wang, M., Zhang, Z., Wang, L. IRF6 polymorphisms are associated with nonsyndromic orofacial clefts in a Chinese Han population. Am. J. Med. Genet. 152A: 2505-2511, 2010. [PubMed: 20799332] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.a.33624]

  5. Rahimov, F., Marazita, M. L., Visel, A., Cooper, M. E., Hitchler, M. J., Rubini, M., Domann, F. E., Govil, M., Christensen, K., Bille, C., Melbye, M., Jugessur, A., and 11 others. Disruption of an AP-2-alpha binding site in an IRF6 enhancer is associated with cleft lip. Nature Genet. 40: 1341-1347, 2008. [PubMed: 18836445] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1038/ng.242]

  6. Scapoli, L., Palmieri, A., Martinelli, M., Pezzetti, F., Carinci, P., Tognon, M., Carinci, F. Strong evidence of linkage disequilibrium between polymorphisms at the IRF6 locus and nonsyndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate, in an Italian population. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 76: 180-183, 2005. [PubMed: 15558496] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1086/427344]

  7. Vieira, A. R., Cooper, M. E., Marazita, M. L., Orioli, I. M., Castilla, E. E. Interferon regulatory factor 6 (IRF6) is associated with oral-facial cleft in individuals that originate in South America. Am. J. Med. Genet. 143A: 2075-2078, 2007. [PubMed: 17702008] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.a.31884]

  8. Zucchero, T. M., Cooper, M. E., Maher, B. S., Daack-Hirsch, S., Nepomuceno, B., Ribeiro, L., Caprau, D., Christensen, K., Suzuki, Y., Machida, J., Natsume, N., Yoshiura, K.-I., and 17 others. Interferon regulatory factor 6 (IRF6) gene variants and the risk of isolated cleft lip or palate. New Eng. J. Med. 351: 769-780, 2004. [PubMed: 15317890] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa032909]


Contributors:
Marla J. F. O'Neill - updated : 12/16/2010
Marla J. F. O'Neill - updated : 6/16/2009
Marla J. F. O'Neill - updated : 11/24/2008
Kelly A. Przylepa - updated : 11/6/2007
Marla J. F. O'Neill - updated : 10/12/2005

Creation Date:
Cassandra L. Kniffin : 8/23/2004

Edit History:
carol : 02/07/2020
carol : 12/04/2017
carol : 02/04/2016
carol : 3/8/2013
alopez : 12/17/2010
terry : 12/16/2010
carol : 6/16/2009
alopez : 11/24/2008
carol : 11/6/2007
wwang : 10/12/2005
ckniffin : 10/12/2005
carol : 8/25/2004
carol : 8/25/2004
ckniffin : 8/23/2004