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Fatal congenital copper transport defect caused by a homozygous likely pathogenic variant of SLC31A1.

Christof DameDenise HornLutz SchomburgJohannes GrünhagenThilo Samson ChillonAnna TietzeAnnika VogtChristoph Bührer
Published in: Clinical genetics (2022)
Known hereditary human diseases featuring impaired copper trafficking across cellular membranes involve ATP7A (Menkes disease, occipital horn disease, X-linked spinal muscular atrophy type 3) and ATP7B (Wilson disease). Herein, we report a newborn infant of consanguineous parents with a homozygous pathogenic variant in a highly conserved sequence of SLC31A1, coding for the copper influx transporter 1, CTR1. This missense variant, c.236T>C, was detected by whole exome sequencing. The infant was born with pulmonary hypoplasia and suffered from severe respiratory distress immediately after birth, necessitating aggressive mechanical ventilation. At two weeks of age, multifocal brain hemorrhages were diagnosed by cerebral ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging, together with increased tortuosity of cerebral arteries. Ensuing seizures were only partly controlled by antiepileptic drugs, and the infant became progressively comatose. Laboratory investigations revealed very low serum concentrations of copper and ceruloplasmin. No hair shaft abnormalities were detected by dermatoscopy or light microscopic analyses of embedded hair shafts obtained at four weeks of life. The infant died after redirection of care and elective cessation of invasive mechanical ventilation at one month of age. This case adds SLC31A1 to the genes implicated in severe hereditary disorders of copper transport in humans. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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