Stankiewicz-Isidor syndrome: expanding the clinical and molecular phenotype
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URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10818/60077Visitar enlace: https://www.scopus.com/inward/ ...
ISSN: 10983600
DOI: 10.1016/j.gim.2021.09.005
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Isidor B.; Ebstein F.; Hurst A.; Vincent M.; Bader I.; Rudy N.L.; Cogne B.; Mayr J.; Brehm A.; Bupp C.; Warren K.; Bacino C.A.; Gerard A.; Ranells J.D.; Metcalfe K.A.; van Bever Y.; Jiang Y.-H.; Mendelssohn B.A.; Cope H.; Rosenfeld J.A.; Blackburn P.R.; Goodenberger M.L.; Kearney H.M.; Kennedy J.; Scurr I.; Szczaluba K.; Ploski R.; de Saint Martin A.; Alembik Y.; Piton A.; Bruel A.-L.; Thauvin-Robinet C.; Strong A.; Diderich K.E.M.; Bourgeois D.; Dahan K.; Vignard V.; Bonneau D.; Colin E.; Barth M.; Camby C.; Baujat G.; Briceño I.; Gómez A.; Deb W.; Conrad S.; Besnard T.; Bézieau S.; Krüger E.; Küry S.; Stankiewicz P.Fecha
2022Resumen
Purpose: Haploinsufficiency of PSMD12 has been reported in individuals with neurodevelopmental phenotypes, including developmental delay/intellectual disability (DD/ID), facial dysmorphism, and congenital malformations, defined as Stankiewicz-Isidor syndrome (STISS). Investigations showed that pathogenic variants in PSMD12 perturb intracellular protein homeostasis. Our objective was to further explore the clinical and molecular phenotypic spectrum of STISS. Methods: We report 24 additional unrelated patients with STISS with various truncating single nucleotide variants or copy-number variant deletions involving PSMD12. We explore disease etiology by assessing patient cells and CRISPR/Cas9-engineered cell clones for various cellular pathways and inflammatory status. Results: The expressivity of most clinical features in STISS is highly variable. In addition to previously reported DD/ID, speech delay, cardiac and renal anomalies, we also confirmed preaxial hand abnormalities as a feature of this syndrome. Of note, 2 patients also showed chilblains resembling signs observed in interferonopathy. Remarkably, our data show that STISS patient cells exhibit a profound remodeling of the mTORC1 and mitophagy pathways with an induction of type I interferon-stimulated genes. Conclusion: We refine the phenotype of STISS and show that it can be clinically recognizable and biochemically diagnosed by a type I interferon gene signature. © 2021 American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics
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Genetics in Medicine Vol. 24 N° 1 p. 179-191
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