A novel FBXO28 frameshift mutation in a child with developmental delay, dysmorphic features, and intractable epilepsy: A second gene that may contribute to the 1q41-q42 deletion phenotype.
Christopher BalakNewell BelnapKeri RamseyShelagh JossKoen DevriendtMarcus NaymikWayne JepsenAshley L SiniardSzabolcs SzelingerMary E ParkerRyan RichholtTyler IzattMadison LaFleurPanieh TerrafLorida LlaciMatt De BothIgnazio S PirasSampathkumar RangasamyIsabelle SchrauwenDavid W CraigMatt HuentelmanVinodh NarayananPublished in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2019)
Chromosome 1q41-q42 deletions have recently been associated with a recognizable neurodevelopmental syndrome of early childhood (OMIM 612530). Within this group, a predominant phenotype of developmental delay (DD), intellectual disability (ID), epilepsy, distinct dysmorphology, and brain anomalies on magnetic resonance imaging/computed tomography has emerged. Previous reports of patients with de novo deletions at 1q41-q42 have led to the identification of an evolving smallest region of overlap which has included several potentially causal genes including DISP1, TP53BP2, and FBXO28. In a recent report, a cohort of patients with de novo mutations in WDR26 was described that shared many of the clinical features originally described in the 1q41-q42 microdeletion syndrome (MDS). Here, we describe a novel germline FBXO28 frameshift mutation in a 3-year-old girl with intractable epilepsy, ID, DD, and other features which overlap those of the 1q41-q42 MDS. Through a familial whole-exome sequencing study, we identified a de novo FBXO28 c.972_973delACinsG (p.Arg325GlufsX3) frameshift mutation in the proband. The frameshift and resulting premature nonsense mutation have not been reported in any genomic database. This child does not have a large 1q41-q42 deletion, nor does she harbor a WDR26 mutation. Our case joins a previously reported patient also in whom FBXO28 was affected but WDR26 was not. These findings support the idea that FBXO28 is a monogenic disease gene and contributes to the complex neurodevelopmental phenotype of the 1q41-q42 gene deletion syndrome.
Keyphrases
- copy number
- intellectual disability
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- genome wide
- case report
- genome wide identification
- autism spectrum disorder
- mental health
- genome wide analysis
- gene expression
- positron emission tomography
- magnetic resonance
- bioinformatics analysis
- white matter
- multiple sclerosis
- electronic health record
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- image quality