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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2014 May 21.
Published in final edited form as: Birth Defects Res A Clin Mol Teratol. 2014 Feb 27;100(4):250–259. doi: 10.1002/bdra.23228

TABLE 1.

Molecular and Phenotypic Information Pertaining to Apert, Crouzon, Muenke, and Pfeiffer Syndromes.

Genes Involved (no. of Known Mutations) Syndrome Birth Prevalence per 1,000,000 births Clinical Craniofacial Phenotypes Clinical Limbs Phenotypes FGFR Functional Domain
FGFR1(1) Pfeiffer 0.5 (Robin et al., 1998; Vogels and Fryns, 2006) Craniosynostosis, midfacial hypoplasia, ocular proptosis, hypertelorism Broad first digits, brachydactyly, variable syndactyly IgII-IgIII linker region
FGFR2 (2a) Apert 10–15.5 (Cohen et al., 1992; Robin et al., 1998) Coronal craniosynostosis, midfacial hypoplasia, sagittal and metopic sutural agenesis, acrobrachycephaly, ocular proptosis, hypertelorism, highly arched and constricted palate Hands and feet syndactyly IgII-IgIII linker region
FGFR2 (40) Crouzon 15 (Cohen and Kreiborg, 1992) Craniosynostosis midfacial hypoplasia, ocular proptosis, hypertelorism, arched palate Normal IgIII domainb
FGFR2 (29) Pfeiffer 9 (Robin et al., 1998; Vogels and Fryns, 2006) More severe craniosynostosis, ocular propotosis and midfacial hypoplasia than FGFR1-related Pfeiffer, hypertelorism Broader thumbs than FGFR1-related Pfeiffer, broad toes, brachydactyly, variable syndactyly IgIII domainb
FGFR3 (1) Muenke 33.5 (Wilkie et al., 2010) Coronal craniosynostosis, highly arched palate, variable facial dymorphisms Variable carpal and tarsal fusion, variable broad great toes IgII-IgIII linker region
a

Apert syndrome can be rarely caused by Alu insertion (Oldridge et al., 1999).

b

About 15% of FGFR2 mutations associated with Pfeiffer or Crouzon syndromes have been identified within IgII, IgII-IgIII linker region, and the tyrosine kinase domain (Wilkie, 2005; Passos-Bueno et al., 2008).