RESUMEN
Assisted reproductive technology (ART) has experienced dramatic progress over the last 30 years, and gamete donation is routine in fertility clinics. Major advances in genetic diagnostics are part of this development due to the ability to analyze multiple genes or whole genomes fast and to an affordable prize. This requires knowledge and capability to evaluate genetic variants correctly in a clinical setting. Here we report a Menkes disease case, born after ART, where genetic screening and variant scoring failed to identify an egg donor as carrier of this fatal X-linked disorder. The gene variant is a deletion of a single base pair leading to a frameshift and premature termination of the protein, predicted to result in no or severely diminished function. The variant would be classified as likely pathogenic (class 4) and should be readily detectable by molecular genetic screening techniques. We wish to highlight this case to prevent future similar cases. IVI Igenomix has developed and embarked on an ambitious screening program to detect and prevent a large number of inherited severe childhood disorders in ART pregnancies. The company has recently achieved ISO 15189 certification with competence to evaluate and deliver timely, accurate, and reliable results. Failure to identify a pathogenic variant in the ATP7A gene leading to birth of two boys with Menkes disease invokes the required procedures to screen and detect disease-causing gene variants. This calls for ethical and legal considerations in ART diagnostics to prevent fatal errors like the present.
Asunto(s)
Síndrome del Pelo Ensortijado , Síndrome del Pelo Ensortijado/genética , Cromosomas Humanos X , Técnicas Reproductivas Asistidas , Humanos , Masculino , Femenino , Embarazo , Persona de Mediana Edad , Resultado del EmbarazoRESUMEN
The pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex is a mitochondrial multienzyme that catalyses the irreversible oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate to acetyl-CoA. We report four novel PDHA1 mutations in patients with pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency. Analysis of PDH activity showed decreased activity in fibroblasts from all four patients, around 16-52% of mean control, similar to what has been found in previous studies. Two of the mutations were missense mutations: c.616G>A (p.Glu206Lys) and c.457A>G (p.Met153Val), one was a 3 bp in-frame deletion: c.429_431delAGG (p.Gly143del), and one was a 65 bp duplication: c.900-6_958dup65. cDNA analysis of the 65 bp duplication showed a small amount of normal transcript in addition to the transcript corresponding to the duplication. The small amount of normal transcript likely explains the survival of the patient, who was a boy. The duplication and one of the missense mutations were associated with decreased amounts of E(1)α And E(1)ß protein on western blot analysis, whereas the other two mutations were associated with normal amounts. This study adds four novel mutations to the around 90 reported mutations in PDHA1 (HGMD PDHA1 mutation database). The phenotypes of patients with PDH deficiency have been divided into three groups: a neonatal form with severe lactic acidosis, a form observed only in males and characterized by episodes of ataxia with relapses associated with hyperlactataemia, and an infantile form with hypotonia, lethargy, onset of seizures or dystonia, psychomotor retardation, in some cases Leigh-like lesions and mild to moderate hyperlactataemia. The four patients reported here all belong to the latter group, which is the largest.