Login / Signup

Homozygous GLI3 variants observed in three unrelated patients presenting with syndromic polydactyly.

Ahmed El MouataniGeraldine van WinckelKhaoula Zaafrane-KhachnaouiSandra WhalenAmale AchaiaaSophie KaltenbachAndrea Superti-FurgaMichel VekemansHeidi FodstadFabienne GiulianoTania Attie-Bitach
Published in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2021)
Polydactyly is a hallmark of GLI3 pathogenic variants, with Greig cephalopolysyndactyly syndrome and Pallister-Hall syndrome being the two main associated clinical presentations. Homozygous GLI3 variants are rare instances in the literature, and mendelian dominance is the accepted framework for GLI3-related diseases. Herein, we report three unrelated probands, presenting with polydactyly, and homozygous variants in the GLI3 gene. First, a 10-year-old girl, whose parents were first-degree cousins, presented with bilateral postaxial polydactyly of the hands, developmental delay and multiple malformations. Second, a male newborn, whose parents were first-degree cousins, presented with isolated bilateral postaxial polysyndactyly of the hands and the feet. Third, an adult male, whose parents were first-degree cousins, had bilateral mesoaxial polydactyly of the hands, with severe intellectual disability and multiple malformations. All three probands carried homozygous GLI3 variants. Strikingly, the parents also carried the child's variant, in the heterozygous state, without any clinical sign of GLI3 disease. Given the clinical presentation of our patients, the rarity and predicted high pathogenicity of the variants observed, and the absence of other pathogenic variants, we suggest that these GLI3 homozygous variants are causal. Moreover, the parents were heterozygous for the observed variants, but were clinically unremarkable, suggesting that these variants are hypomorphic alleles.
Keyphrases
  • copy number
  • intellectual disability
  • case report
  • systematic review
  • chronic kidney disease
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • genome wide
  • end stage renal disease
  • early onset
  • newly diagnosed
  • mental health