A homozygous Y443C variant in the RNPC3 is associated with severe syndromic congenital hypopituitarism and diffuse brain atrophy.
Diğdem BezenOrkide KutluStephane MouilleronKarine RizzotiMehul Tulsidas DattaniTülay GüranGözde YeşilPublished in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2022)
Biallelic RNPC3 variants have been reported in a few patients with growth hormone deficiency, either in isolation or in association with central hypothyroidism, congenital cataract, neuropathy, developmental delay/intellectual disability, hypogonadism, and pituitary hypoplasia. To describe a new patient with syndromic congenital hypopituitarism and diffuse brain atrophy due to RNPC3 mutations and to compare her clinical and molecular characteristics and pituitary functions with previously published patients. A 20-year-old female presented with severe growth, neuromotor, and developmental delay. Her weight, height, and head circumference were 5135 gr (-25.81 SDS), 68 cm (-16.17 SDS), and 34 cm (-17.03 SDS), respectively. She was prepubertal, and had dysmorphic facies, contractures, and spasticity in the extremities, and severe truncal hypotonia. There were no radiological signs of a skeletal dysplasia. The bone age was extremely delayed at 2 years. Investigation of pituitary function revealed growth hormone, prolactin, and thyroid-stimulating hormone deficiencies. Whole-exome sequencing revealed a novel homozygous missense (c.1328A > G; Y443C) variant in RNPC3. Cranial MRI revealed a hypoplastic anterior pituitary with diffuse cerebral and cerebellar atrophy. The Y443C variant in RNPC3 associated with syndromic congenital hypopituitarism and abnormal brain development. This report extends the RNPC3-related hypopituitarism phenotype with a severe neurodegenerative presentation.
Keyphrases
- growth hormone
- intellectual disability
- autism spectrum disorder
- body mass index
- early onset
- white matter
- resting state
- low grade
- single cell
- end stage renal disease
- cerebral ischemia
- drug induced
- replacement therapy
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- magnetic resonance imaging
- chronic kidney disease
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- soft tissue
- contrast enhanced
- gene expression
- magnetic resonance
- brain injury
- weight gain
- bone loss
- botulinum toxin
- meta analyses