Phenotypic and molecular insights into PQBP1-related intellectual disability.
Ghada M H Abdel-SalamNoriko MiyakeMohamed S Abdel-HamidInas S M SayedMohamed I GadelhakSamira I IsmailMona S AglanHanan H AfifiSamia A TemtamyNaomichi MatsumotoPublished in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2018)
We report two discordant clinical and imaging features in four male patients from two unrelated families of Egyptian descent with hemizygous pathogenic variants in PQBP1. The three patients of the first family displayed the typical features underlying PQBP1 such as the long triangular face, bulbous nose, hypoplastic malar region, and micrognathia, which were subsequently confirmed using targeted sequence analysis that showed a previously reported nonsense mutation c.586C>T p.R196*. Whole exome sequencing identified a novel missense PQBP1 variant c.530G>A:p.R177H in the second family, in which the index patient presented with intellectual disability and dysmorphic facial features reminiscent of Kabuki-like syndrome and his brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed partial agenesis of corpus callosum, mild vermis, and brainstem hypoplasia. These imaging features are distinct from the previously described with a well-known phenotype that is already known for PQBP1. This report expands the phenotypic spectrum of PQBP1-related disorders and is the second reported missense PQBP1 variant. Further, it highlights the possible role of PQBP1 in hindbrain development.
Keyphrases
- intellectual disability
- autism spectrum disorder
- end stage renal disease
- magnetic resonance imaging
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- high resolution
- computed tomography
- dna methylation
- cancer therapy
- magnetic resonance
- drug delivery
- mass spectrometry
- single cell
- resting state
- patient reported
- brain injury
- functional connectivity
- blood brain barrier
- soft tissue
- amino acid