Domain-specific phenotypes in LINS1-related disorder-A Chinese family with the Q92X variant and literature review.
Xu-Ying LiZhanjun WangYanping YangRuichai LinChaodong WangPublished in: American journal of medical genetics. Part C, Seminars in medical genetics (2024)
LINS1 is the human homolog of the Drosophila segment polarity gene that encodes an essential regulator of the wingless/Wnt signaling. By 2011, only seven pedigrees (16 patients) with eight causative variants in LINS1 gene have been reported. These cases mainly presented with infancy-/child-onset neurodevelopmental disorders, facial dysmorphia, and other clinical features, and a wide spectrum of clinically distinct phenotypes were also manifested. In our study, two brothers in a family were admitted and diagnosed with child-onset movement disorders, slight intellectual disability, psychological symptoms, eye problems, urinary and bowel dysfunction, mitral value prolapse, and Q-T prolongation. By exome sequencing, we identified a nonsense homozygous pathogenic variant (LINS1: c.274C > T (p.Q92X)), which had been reported in a case diagnosed with intellectual disability and psychiatric disorders (such as schizophrenia and anxiety). Compared with this case, the clinical features of our cases were distinct. In particular, our cases displayed unusual features of heart and blood system. Furthermore, the genotype-phenotype relationship analysis suggested that distinct phenotypes presented in cases carrying variants in different domains of the LINS1 gene. In conclusions, our findings suggest the high clinical variations in the LINS1 variants-related disorders. Moreover, the Q92X might be a recurrent variant in Hans of Southern China.
Keyphrases
- intellectual disability
- copy number
- autism spectrum disorder
- mental health
- genome wide
- endothelial cells
- dna methylation
- sleep quality
- heart failure
- mitral valve
- bipolar disorder
- oxidative stress
- genome wide identification
- left ventricular
- transcription factor
- left atrial
- coronary artery disease
- body mass index
- weight gain
- transcatheter aortic valve replacement
- aortic stenosis