Bleeding and Platelet Disorders
Gene: WAS
Mutations in the WAS gene have been found in patients with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (#301000), X-linked thrombocytopenia (#313900), and X-linked severe congenital neutropenia (SCNX; #300299).
Missense mutations that cause WAS map primarily to the enabled (609061)/VASP (601703) homology-1 (EVH1) domain of WASP.
PMID: 34307257: Reported Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome caused by extremely skewed X-Chromosome inactivation in a Chinese Girl.Created: 21 Mar 2022, 9:45 p.m. | Last Modified: 21 Mar 2022, 9:45 p.m.
Panel Version: 0.11705
Mode of inheritance
X-LINKED: hemizygous mutation in males, biallelic mutations in females
Phenotypes
Congenital Neutropenia; Throbocytopenia; Immunodefeciency; Eczema
Publications
Well established gene-disease association. Thrombocytopaenia is a key feature of Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome and isolated thrombocytopaenia also described with WAS variants.
Sources: Expert listCreated: 17 Aug 2020, 1:06 a.m.
Mode of inheritance
X-LINKED: hemizygous mutation in males, biallelic mutations in females
Phenotypes
Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, MIM# 301000; Thrombocytopenia, X-linked, MIM# 313900
Gene: was has been classified as Green List (High Evidence).
Gene: was has been classified as Green List (High Evidence).
gene: WAS was added gene: WAS was added to Bleeding Disorders. Sources: Expert list Mode of inheritance for gene: WAS was set to X-LINKED: hemizygous mutation in males, biallelic mutations in females Phenotypes for gene: WAS were set to Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, MIM# 301000; Thrombocytopenia, X-linked, MIM# 313900 Review for gene: WAS was set to GREEN