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Rett syndrome caused by MECP2 variants is characterized by a heterogenous clinical spectrum accounted for in 60% of cases by hot-spot variants. Focusing on the most frequent variants, we generated in vitro iPSC-neurons from the blood of RTT girls with p.Arg133Cys and p.Arg255*, associated to mild and severe phenotype, respectively, and of an RTT male harboring the close to p.Arg255*, p.Gly252Argfs*7 variant. Truncated MeCP2 proteins were revealed by Western blot and immunofluorescence analysis. We compared the mutant versus control neurons at 42 days for morphological parameters and at 120 days for electrophysiology recordings, including girls' isogenic clones. A precocious reduced morphological complexity was evident in neurons with truncating variants, while in p.Arg133Cys neurons any significant differences were observed in comparison with the isogenic wild-type clones. Reduced nuclear size and branch number show up as the most robust biomarkers. Patch clamp recordings on mature neurons allowed the assessment of cell biophysical properties, V-gated currents, and spiking pattern in the mutant and control cells. Immature spiking, altered cell capacitance, and membrane resistance of RTT neurons, were particularly pronounced in the Arg255* and Gly252Argfs*7 mutants. The overall results indicate that the specific markers of in vitro cellular phenotype mirror the clinical severity and may be amenable to drug testing for translational purposes.
Assuntos
Células-Tronco Pluripotentes Induzidas , Síndrome de Rett , Masculino , Feminino , Humanos , Síndrome de Rett/genética , Síndrome de Rett/metabolismo , Células-Tronco Pluripotentes Induzidas/metabolismo , Neurônios , FenótipoRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Silver-Russell Syndrome (SRS, MIM #180860) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous disorder characterized by intrauterine and postnatal growth retardation; SRS is also accompanied by dysmorphic features such as triangular facial appearance, broad forehead, body asymmetry and significant feeding difficulties. The incidence is unknown but estimated at 1:30,000-100,000 live births. The diagnosis of SRS is guided by specific criteria described in the Netchine-Harbison clinical scoring system (NH-CSS). CASE PRESENTATION: Hereby we describe four patients with syndromic short stature in whom, despite fitting the criteria for SRS genetic analysis (and one on them even meeting the clinical criteria for SRS), molecular analysis actually diagnosed a different syndrome. Some additional features such as hypotonia, microcephaly, developmental delay and/or intellectual disability, and family history of growth failure, were actually discordant with SRS in our cohort. CONCLUSIONS: The clinical resemblance of other short stature syndromes with SRS poses a risk of diagnostic failure, in particular when clinical SRS only criteria are met, allowing SRS diagnosis in the absence of a positive result of a genetic test. The presence of additional features atypical for SRS diagnosis becomes a red flag for a more extensive and thorough analysis. The signs relevant to the differential diagnosis should be valued as much as possible since a correct diagnosis of these patients is the only way to provide the appropriate care pathway, a thorough genetic counselling, prognosis definition, follow up setting, appropriate monitoring and care of possible medical problems.
Assuntos
Síndrome de Silver-Russell , Humanos , Feminino , Masculino , Síndrome de Silver-Russell/genética , Síndrome de Silver-Russell/diagnóstico , Pré-Escolar , Diagnóstico Diferencial , Criança , Nanismo/genética , Nanismo/diagnóstico , Lactente , Transtornos do Crescimento/diagnóstico , Transtornos do Crescimento/genéticaRESUMO
CONTEXT: Silver-Russell Syndrome (SRS) is a growth retardation disorder characterized by pre- and post-natal growth failure, relative macrocephaly at birth, prominent forehead, body asymmetry, and feeding difficulties. The main molecular mechanisms are imprinting alterations at multiple loci, though a small number of pathogenic variants have been reported in the SRS genes IGF2-PLAG1-HMGA2 and CDKN1C. However, around 40% of clinically suspected SRS cases do not achieve a molecular diagnosis, highlighting the necessity to uncover the underlying mechanism in unsolved cases. OBJECTIVE: evaluate the frequency of genetic variants in undiagnosed SRS patients (NH-CSS≥4), and investigate whether (epi)genetic patients may be distinguished from genetic patients. METHODS: 132 clinically SRS patients without (epi)genetic deregulations were investigated by Whole Exome (n=15) and Targeted (n=117) Sequencing. Clinical data from our cohort and from an extensive revision of literature were compared. RESULTS: pathogenic variants were identified in 9.1% of this cohort: 3% in IGF2, PLAG1, and HMGA2 genes, while 3% in the IGF1R gene, associated with IGF-1 resistance (IGF1RES), an SRS differential diagnosis. Overall, IGF2-PLAG1-HMGA2 and IGF1R account for 3.6% of SRS with NH-CSS score ≥ 4. A clinical cross-comparison of (epi)genetic versus genetic SRS underlined (epi)genotype-phenotype correlation, highlighted the prevalence of body asymmetry and relative macrocephaly in mosaic (epi)genetic SRS and recurrence of genetic familial cases. Furthermore, overlapping features were evidenced in (epi)genetic SRS and IGF1RES patients. CONCLUSION: Our study explores the frequency of genetic SRS, underscores body asymmetry as distinctive phenotype in (epi)genetic SRS and suggests IGF1R sequencing in SRS diagnostic flow-chart.
RESUMO
The amount of Insulin Growth Factor 2 (IGF2) controls the rate of embryonal and postnatal growth. The IGF2 and adjacent H19 are the imprinted genes of the telomeric cluster in the 11p15 chromosomal region regulated by differentially methylated regions (DMRs) or imprinting centers (ICs): H19/IGF2:IG-DMR (IC1). Dysregulation due to IC1 Loss-of-Methylation (LoM) or Gain-of-Methyaltion (GoM) causes Silver-Russell syndrome (SRS) or Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) disorders associated with growth retardation or overgrowth, respectively. Specific features define each of the two syndromes, but isolated asymmetry is a common cardinal feature, which is considered sufficient for a diagnosis in the BWS spectrum. Here, we report the case of a girl with right body asymmetry, which suggested BWS spectrum. Later, BWS/SRS molecular analysis identified IC1_LoM revealing the discrepant diagnosis of SRS. A clinical re-evaluation identified a relative macrocephaly and previously unidentified growth rate at lower limits of normal at birth, feeding difficulties, and asymmetry. Interestingly, and never previously described in IC1_LoM SRS patients, since the age of 16, she has developed hand-writer's cramps, depression, and bipolar disorder. Trio-WES identified a VPS16 heterozygous variant [NM_022575.4:c.2185C>G:p.Leu729Val] inherited from her healthy mother. VPS16 is involved in the endolysosomal system, and its dysregulation is linked to autosomal dominant dystonia with incomplete penetrance and variable expressivity. IGF2 involvement in the lysosomal pathway led us to speculate that the neurological phenotype of the proband might be triggered by the concurrent IGF2 deficit and VPS16 alteration.
RESUMO
Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS, OMIM # 130650) is an imprinting disorder, associated with overgrowth and increased risk of embryonal tumors. Patients carrying hypomethylation in the KCNQ1OT1:TSS DMR (11p15.5) show MLID (Multilocus Imprinting Disturbance) upon epimutations at other imprinted regions. Few cases of BWS MLID's mothers with biallelic pathogenetic variants in maternal effect genes, mainly components of the subcortical maternal complex, are reported. We describe two families, one with a history of conception difficulties with a novel homozygous nonsense NLRP2 variant and another experiencing 8 miscarriages with a compound heterozygous PADI6 variant.
Assuntos
Aborto Espontâneo , Síndrome de Beckwith-Wiedemann , Infertilidade , Aborto Espontâneo/genética , Síndrome de Beckwith-Wiedemann/genética , Metilação de DNA , Feminino , Impressão Genômica , Células Germinativas , Humanos , Infertilidade/genética , GravidezRESUMO
Silver Russell Syndrome (SRS, MIM #180860) is a rare growth retardation disorder in which clinical diagnosis is based on six features: pre- and postnatal growth failure, relative macrocephaly, prominent forehead, body asymmetry, and feeding difficulties (Netchine-Harbison clinical scoring system (NH-CSS)). The molecular mechanisms consist in (epi)genetic deregulations at multiple loci: the loss of methylation (LOM) at the paternal H19/IGF2:IG-DMR (chr11p15.5) (50%) and the maternal uniparental disomy of chromosome 7 (UPD(7)mat) (10%) are the most frequent causes. Thus far, about 40% of SRS remains undiagnosed, pointing to the need to define the rare mechanisms in such a consistent fraction of unsolved patients. Within a cohort of 176 SRS with an NH-CSS ≥ 3, a molecular diagnosis was disclosed in about 45%. Among the remaining patients, we identified in 3 probands (1.7%) with UPD(20)mat (Mulchandani-Bhoj-Conlin syndrome, OMIM #617352), a molecular mechanism deregulating the GNAS locus and described in 21 cases, characterized by severe feeding difficulties associated with failure to thrive, preterm birth, and intrauterine/postnatal growth retardation. Our patients share prominent forehead, feeding difficulties, postnatal growth delay, and advanced maternal age. Their clinical assessment and molecular diagnostic flowchart contribute to better define the characteristics of this rare imprinting disorder and to rank UPD(20)mat as the fourth most common pathogenic molecular defect causative of SRS.