Autopsy findings in EPG5-related Vici syndrome with antenatal onset.
Renaud TouraineAnnie LaquerrièreCarmen-Adina PetcuFlorent MarguetSusan ByrneRachael MeinShu YauShehla MohammedLaurent GuibaudMathias GautelHeinz JungbluthPublished in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2017)
Vici syndrome is one of the most extensive inherited human multisystem disorders and due to recessive mutations in EPG5 encoding a key autophagy regulator with a crucial role in autophagosome-lysosome fusion. The condition presents usually early in life, with features of severe global developmental delay, profound failure to thrive, (acquired) microcephaly, callosal agenesis, cataracts, cardiomyopathy, hypopigmentation, and combined immunodeficiency. Clinical course is variable but usually progressive and associated with high mortality. Here, we present a fetus, offspring of consanguineous parents, in whom callosal agenesis and other developmental brain abnormalities were detected on fetal ultrasound scan (US) and subsequent MRI scan in the second trimester. Postmortem examination performed after medically indicated termination of pregnancy confirmed CNS abnormalities and provided additional evidence for skin hypopigmentation, nascent cataracts, and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Genetic testing prompted by a suggestive combination of features revealed a homozygous EPG5 mutation (c.5870-1G>A) predicted to cause aberrant splicing of the EPG5 transcript. Our findings expand the phenotypical spectrum of EPG5-related Vici syndrome and suggest that this severe condition may already present in utero. While callosal agenesis is not an uncommon finding in fetal medicine, additional presence of hypopigmentation, cataracts and cardiomyopathy is rare and should prompt EPG5 testing.
Keyphrases
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- preterm birth
- intellectual disability
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- heart failure
- left ventricular
- case report
- pregnant women
- endothelial cells
- oxidative stress
- early onset
- cell death
- contrast enhanced
- signaling pathway
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- gestational age
- blood brain barrier
- high fat diet
- metabolic syndrome
- transcription factor
- coronary artery disease
- rna seq
- drug induced
- risk factors
- resting state
- atrial fibrillation
- pluripotent stem cells
- diffusion weighted imaging
- brain injury
- wound healing