RESUMO
Correction to: Journal of Human Genetics (2016) 61, 229-33 https://doi.org/10.1038/jhg.2015.134 ; published online 26 November 2015.
RESUMO
In 2012 Alazami et al. described a novel syndromic cause of primordial dwarfism with distinct facial features and severe intellectual disability. A homozygous frameshift mutation in LARP7, a chaperone of the noncoding RNA 7SK, was discovered in patients from a single consanguineous Saudi family. To date, only one additional patient has recently been described. To further delineate the phenotype associated with LARP7 mutations, we report two additional cases originating from the Netherlands and Saudi Arabia. The patients presented with intellectual disability, distinct facial features and variable short stature. We describe their clinical features and compare them with the previously reported patients. Both cases were identified by diagnostic whole-exome sequencing, which detected two homozygous pathogenic LARP7 variants: c.1091_1094delCGGT in the Dutch case and c.1045_1051dupAAGGATA in the Saudi Arabian case. Both variants are leading to frameshifts with introduction of premature stop codons, suggesting that loss of function is likely the disease mechanism. This study is an independent confirmation of the syndrome due to LARP7 depletion. Our cases broaden the associated clinical features of the syndrome and contribute to the delineation of the phenotypic spectrum of LARP7 mutations.
Assuntos
Fácies , Transtornos do Crescimento/genética , Deficiência Intelectual/genética , Ribonucleoproteínas/genética , Criança , Pré-Escolar , Humanos , Masculino , FenótipoRESUMO
This case report profiles two children whose sole presentation is intractable seizures. The index case is a 1-year-old female. She presented to the emergency department with intractable seizures. Her initial metabolic evaluation was nonconclusive. Electroencephalogram was abnormal. Brain magnetic resonance imaging yielded a picture consistent with profound ischemic hypoxic injury. The second case was the 8-year-old brother of the index case. He suffered from intractable seizures since birth. On examination he was microcephalic with spastic quadriparesis and bilateral dislocation of lenses. Computed tomography of the brain revealed a low-density area in the white and cortical matter consistent with hypoxic-ischemic injury. His urinalysis for sulfocysteine produced findings consistent with isolated sulfite oxidase deficiency.