Exome sequencing reveals three homozygous missense variants in SNRPA in two sisters with syndromic intellectual disability.
M M Rangel-SosaL E Figuera-VillanuevaI A González-RamosY X Pérez-PáramoL A Martínez-JacoboL Arnaud-LópezJ A Nastasi-CataneseA M Rivas-EstillaK A Galán-HuertaA Rojas-MartínezR Ortiz-LópezCarlos Córdova-FletesPublished in: Clinical genetics (2018)
Splicing-related gene mutations might affect the expression of a single gene or multiple genes and cause clinically heterogeneous diseases. With the advent of next-generation sequencing, several splicing gene mutations have been exposed, yet most major spliceosome genes have no reports of germline mutations and therefore, their effects are largely unknown. We describe the previously unreported concurrence of intellectual disability, short stature, poor speech, and minor craniofacial and hand anomalies in 2 female siblings with 3 homozygous missense variants in SNRPA (a component of the U1 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein complex) characterized by homozygosity mapping and whole exome sequencing. Combined, c.97A>G, c.98T>C, and c.100T>A, in exon 2 of SNRPA lead to p.Ile33Ala and p.Phe34Ile exchanges, which were predicted in silico to be deleterious. Although both patients exhibited some clinical features seen in other spliceosomal disorders, their complete clinical phenotype appears to be rather uncommon, a finding that may further support the notion that mutations in components of the major spliceosome do not strictly lead to the same syndromes/phenotypes.
Keyphrases
- intellectual disability
- copy number
- autism spectrum disorder
- genome wide
- end stage renal disease
- genome wide identification
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- dna methylation
- poor prognosis
- high resolution
- peritoneal dialysis
- chronic kidney disease
- prognostic factors
- emergency department
- genome wide analysis
- bioinformatics analysis
- single cell
- dna repair
- transcription factor
- mass spectrometry
- long non coding rna
- molecular dynamics simulations