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NBAS pathogenic variants: Defining the associated clinical and facial phenotype and genotype-phenotype correlations.

Diana CarliElisa GiorgioFrancesca PantaleoniAlessandro BrusellesSabina BarresiEvelise RiberiFrancesco LicciardiAndrea GazzinGiuseppina BaldassarreSimone PizziMarcello NicetaFrancesca C RadioCristina MolinattoDavide MontinPier L CalvoAndrea CiolfiNicole FleischerGiovanni B FerreroAlfredo BruscoTartaglia Marco
Published in: Human mutation (2019)
The pathogenic variants in the neuroblastoma-amplified sequence (NBAS) are associated with a clinical spectrum involving the hepatic, skeletal, ocular, and immune systems. Here, we report on two unrelated subjects with a complex phenotype solved by whole-exome sequencing, who shared a synonymous change in NBAS that was documented to affect the transcript processing and co-occurring with a truncating change. Starting from these two cases, we systematically assessed the clinical information available for all subjects with biallelic NBAS pathogenic variants (73 cases in total). We revealed a recognizable facial profile (hypotelorism, thin lips, pointed chin, and "progeroid" appearance) determined by using DeepGestalt facial recognition technology, and we provide evidence for the occurrence of genotype-phenotype correlations. Notably, severe hepatic involvement was associated with variants affecting the NBAS-Nter and Sec39 domains, whereas milder liver involvement and immunodeficiency were generally associated with variants located at the N-terminus and C-terminus of the protein. Remarkably, no patient was reported to carry two nonsense variants, suggesting lethality of complete NBAS loss-of-function.
Keyphrases
  • copy number
  • soft tissue
  • healthcare
  • gene expression
  • risk assessment
  • dna methylation
  • genome wide
  • early onset
  • intellectual disability
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • optical coherence tomography
  • protein protein