RASGRP2 gene variations associated with platelet dysfunction and bleeding

This manuscript reviews pathogenic variants in RASGRP2, which are the cause of a relatively new autosomal recessive and nonsyndromic inherited platelet function disorder, referred to as platelet-type bleeding disorder-18 (BDPLT18)(OMIM:615888). To date, 18 unrelated BDPLT18 pedigrees have been repor...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Verónica Palma-Barqueros, Juan Ruiz-Pividal, Natalia Bohdan, Vicente Vicente, Jose Maria Bastida, María Lozano, José Rivera
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-05-01
Series:Platelets
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09537104.2019.1585528
Description
Summary:This manuscript reviews pathogenic variants in RASGRP2, which are the cause of a relatively new autosomal recessive and nonsyndromic inherited platelet function disorder, referred to as platelet-type bleeding disorder-18 (BDPLT18)(OMIM:615888). To date, 18 unrelated BDPLT18 pedigrees have been reported, harboring 19 different homozygous or compound heterozygous RASGRP2 variants. Patients with this disease present with lifelong moderate to severe bleeding, with epistaxis as the most common and relevant bleeding symptom. Biologically, they exhibit normal platelet count and morphology, reduced aggregation responses to ADP, epinephrine and low-dose collagen, and impaired αIIbβ3 integrin activation (fibrinogen or PAC-1 binding) in response to most agonists except PMA. Diagnosis is confirmed by genetic analysis of RASGRP2.
ISSN:0953-7104
1369-1635