MYT1L-associated neurodevelopmental disorder: description of 40 new cases and literature review of clinical and molecular aspects.
Juliette CoursimaultAnne-Marie GuerrotMichelle M MorrowCatherine SchrammFrancisca Millan ZamoraAnita ShanmughamShuxi LiuFanggeng ZouFrédéric BilanGwenaël Le GuyaderAnge-Line BruelAnne-Sophie Denommé-PichonLaurence FaivreFrédéric Tran Mau-ThemMarine TessarechEstelle ColinSalima El ChehadehBénédicte GérardElise SchaeferBenjamin CogneBertrand IsidorMathilde NizonDiane DoummarStéphanie ValenceDelphine HéronBoris KerenCyril MignotCharles CouttonFrançoise DevillardAnne-Sophie AlaixJeanne AmielLaurence ColleauxArnold MunnichKarine PoirierMarlène RioSophie RondeauGiulia BarciaBert CallewaertAnnelies DheedeneCandy KumpsSarah VergultBjörn MentenWendy K ChungRebecca HernanAustin LarsonKelly NoriSarah StewartJames WhelessChristina KresgeBeth A PletcherRoseline CaumesThomas SmolSabine SigaudyChristine CoubesMargaret HelmRosemarie SmithJennifer MorrisonPatricia G WheelerAmy KritzerGuillaume JouretAlexandra AfenjarJean-François DeleuzeRobert OlasoAnne BolandChristine PoitouThierry FrebourgClaude HoudayerPascale Saugier-VeberGaël NicolasFrancois LecoquierrePublished in: Human genetics (2021)
Pathogenic variants of the myelin transcription factor-1 like (MYT1L) gene include heterozygous missense, truncating variants and 2p25.3 microdeletions and cause a syndromic neurodevelopmental disorder (OMIM#616,521). Despite enrichment in de novo mutations in several developmental disorders and autism studies, the data on clinical characteristics and genotype-phenotype correlations are scarce, with only 22 patients with single nucleotide pathogenic variants reported. We aimed to further characterize this disorder at both the clinical and molecular levels by gathering a large series of patients with MYT1L-associated neurodevelopmental disorder. We collected genetic information on 40 unreported patients with likely pathogenic/pathogenic MYT1L variants and performed a comprehensive review of published data (total = 62 patients). We confirm that the main phenotypic features of the MYT1L-related disorder are developmental delay with language delay (95%), intellectual disability (ID, 70%), overweight or obesity (58%), behavioral disorders (98%) and epilepsy (23%). We highlight novel clinical characteristics, such as learning disabilities without ID (30%) and feeding difficulties during infancy (18%). We further describe the varied dysmorphic features (67%) and present the changes in weight over time of 27 patients. We show that patients harboring highly clustered missense variants in the 2-3-ZNF domains are not clinically distinguishable from patients with truncating variants. We provide an updated overview of clinical and genetic data of the MYT1L-associated neurodevelopmental disorder, hence improving diagnosis and clinical management of these patients.
Keyphrases
- intellectual disability
- end stage renal disease
- copy number
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- transcription factor
- autism spectrum disorder
- randomized controlled trial
- gene expression
- physical activity
- multiple sclerosis
- body mass index
- weight gain
- adipose tissue
- electronic health record
- patient reported
- patient reported outcomes
- genome wide
- healthcare
- systematic review
- dna binding
- health information
- data analysis