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MAST1 variant causes mega-corpus-callosum syndrome with cortical malformations but without cerebellar hypoplasia.

María Elena Rodríguez-GarcíaFrancisco Javier Cotrina-VinagreMaría de Los Ángeles Gómez-CanoAna Martínez de AragónElena Martín-HernándezFrancisco Martínez-Azorín
Published in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2020)
We report the case of a Caucasian Spanish origin female who showed severe psychomotor developmental delay, hypotonia, strabismus, epilepsy, short stature, and poor verbal language development. Brain magnetic resonance imaging scans showed thickened corpus callosum, cortical malformations, and dilated and abnormal configuration of the lateral ventricles without hydrocephalus. Whole-exome sequence uncovered a de novo variant in the microtubule associated serine/threonine kinase 1 gene (MAST1; NM_014975.3:c.1565G>A:p.(Gly522Glu)) that encodes for the MAST1. Only 12 patients have been identified worldwide with 10 different variants in this gene: six patients with mega-corpus-callosum syndrome with cerebellar hypoplasia and cortical malformations; two patients with microcephaly and cerebellar hypoplasia; two patients with autism, one patient with diplegia, and one patient with microcephaly and dysmorphism. Our patient shows a new phenotypic subtype defined by mega-corpus-callosum syndrome with cortical malformations without cerebellar hypoplasia. In conclusion, our data expand the phenotypic spectrum associated to MAST1 gene variants.
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