WDR45B-related intellectual disability, spastic quadriplegia, epilepsy, and cerebral hypoplasia: A consistent neurodevelopmental syndrome.
Jehan SuleimanD Allingham-HawkinsM HashemH E ShamseldinFowzan Sami AlkurayaAyman W. El-HattabPublished in: Clinical genetics (2017)
The advancement in genomic sequencing has greatly improved the diagnostic yield for neurodevelopmental disorders and led to the discovery of large number of novel genes associated with these disorders. WDR45B has been identified as a potential intellectual disability gene through genomic sequencing of 2 large cohorts of affected individuals. In this report we present 6 individuals from 3 unrelated families with homozygous pathogenic variants in WDR45B: c.799C>T (p.Q267*) in 1 family and c.673C>T (p.R225*) in 2 families. These individuals shared a similar phenotype including profound development delay, early-onset refractory epilepsy, progressive spastic quadriplegia and contractures, and brain malformations. Neuroimaging showed ventriculomegaly, reduced cerebral white matter volume, and thinning of cerebral gray matter. The consistency in the phenotype strongly supports that WDR45B is associated with this disease.
Keyphrases
- intellectual disability
- early onset
- copy number
- white matter
- autism spectrum disorder
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- cerebral ischemia
- multiple sclerosis
- late onset
- cerebral palsy
- single cell
- botulinum toxin
- genome wide
- small molecule
- brain injury
- dna methylation
- high throughput
- cerebral blood flow
- gene expression
- case report
- blood brain barrier
- resting state
- cord blood
- climate change
- drug induced