RESUMO
Coats plus syndrome is an autosomal recessive multisystemic and pleiotropic disorder affecting the eyes, brain, bone, and gastrointestinal tract, usually caused by compound heterozygous variants of the conserved telomere maintenance component 1 gene (CTC1), involved in telomere homeostasis and replication. So far, most reported patients are compound heterozygous for a truncating mutation and a missense variant. The phenotype is believed to result from telomere dysfunction, with accumulation of DNA damage, cellular senescence, and stem cell depletion. Here, we report a 23-year-old female with prenatal and postnatal growth retardation, microcephaly, osteopenia, recurrent fractures, intracranial calcification, leukodystrophy, parenchymal brain cysts, bicuspid aortic valve, and primary ovarian failure. She carries a previously reported maternally inherited pathogenic variant in exon 5 (c.724_727del, p.(Lys242Leufs*41)) and a novel, paternally inherited splice site variant (c.1617+5G>T; p.(Lys480Asnfs*17)) in intron 9. CTC1 transcript analysis showed that the latter resulted in skipping of exon 9. A trace of transcripts was normally spliced resulting in the presence of a low level of wild-type CTC1 transcripts. We speculate that ovarian failure is caused by telomere shortening or chromosome cohesion failure in oocytes and granulosa cells, with early decrease in follicular reserve. This is the first patient carrying 2 truncating CTC1 variants and the first presenting primary ovarian failure.
Assuntos
Calcinose , Cistos do Sistema Nervoso Central , Leucoencefalopatias , Ataxia/genética , Ataxia/patologia , Neoplasias Encefálicas , Calcinose/genética , Cistos do Sistema Nervoso Central/genética , Cistos do Sistema Nervoso Central/patologia , Feminino , Humanos , Leucoencefalopatias/genética , Leucoencefalopatias/patologia , Espasticidade Muscular , Mutação , Doenças Retinianas , Convulsões , Proteínas de Ligação a Telômeros/genéticaRESUMO
BACKGROUND: Cerebroretinal microangiopathy with calcifications and cysts (CRMCC) is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by pathogenic variants of the conserved telomere maintenance component 1 (CTC1) gene. The CTC1 forms the telomeric capping complex, CST, which functions in telomere homeostasis and replication. METHODS: A Brazilian pedigree and an Australian pedigree were referred to the International Registry of Werner Syndrome (Seattle, WA, USA), with clinical features of accelerated aging and recurrent bone fractures. Whole exome sequencing was performed to identify the genetic causes. RESULTS: Whole exome sequencing of the Brazilian pedigree revealed compound heterozygous pathogenic variants in CTC1: a missense mutation (c.2959C>T, p.Arg987Trp) and a novel stop codon change (c.322C>T, p.Arg108*). The Australian patient carried two novel heterozygous CTC1 variants, c.2916G>T, p.Val972Gly and c.2926G>T, p.Val976Phe within the same allele. Both heterozygous variants were inherited from the unaffected father, excluding the diagnosis of CRMCC in this pedigree. Cell biological studies demonstrated accumulation of double strand break foci in lymphoblastoid cell lines derived from the patients. Increased DSB foci were extended to non-telomeric regions of the genome, in agreement with previous biochemical studies showing a preferential binding of CTC1 protein to GC-rich sequences. CONCLUSION: CTC1 pathogenic variants can present with unusual manifestations of progeria accompanied with recurrent bone fractures. Further studies are needed to elucidate the disease mechanism leading to the clinical presentation with intra-familial variations of CRMCC.