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A case of Joubert syndrome caused by novel compound heterozygous variants in the TMEM67 gene.

Anastasiya Aleksandrovna KozinaGuria Kurbanovna KanaevaNatalia Vladimirovna BaryshnikovaAnna Yurievna IlinskayaAnna Alexandrovna KimAnastasia Vladimirovna ErofeevaNadezhda Andreevna PogodinaJamilya Payzutdinova GadzhiyevaEkaterina Ivanovna SurkovaValery Vladimirovich Ilinsky
Published in: The Journal of international medical research (2023)
Joubert syndrome (JS) is a recessive disorder that is characterized by midbrain-hindbrain malformation and shows the "molar tooth sign" on magnetic resonance imaging. Mutations in 40 genes, including Abelson helper integration site 1 ( AHI1 ), inositol polyphosphate-5-phosphatase ( INPP5E ), coiled-coil and c2 domain-containing protein 2A ( CC2D2A ), and ARL2-like protein 1 ( ARL13B ), can cause JS. Classic JS is a part of a group of diseases associated with JS, and its manifestations include various neurological signs such as skeletal abnormalities, ocular coloboma, renal disease, and hepatic fibrosis. Here, we present a proband with the molar tooth sign, ataxia, and developmental and psychomotor delays in a Dagestan family from Russia. Molecular genetic testing revealed two novel heterozygous variants, c.2924G>A (p.Arg975His) in exon 28 and c.1241C>G (p.Pro414Arg) in exon 12 of the transmembrane protein 67 ( TMEM67 ) gene. These TMEM67 gene variants significantly affected the development of JS type 6. This case highlights the importance of whole exome sequencing for a proper clinical diagnosis of children with complex motor and psycho-language delays. This case also expands the clinical phenotype and genotype of TMEM67 -associated diseases.
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