Impact of genetic and non-genetic factors on phenotypic diversity in NBAS-associated disease

Biallelic pathogenic variants in neuroblastoma-amplified sequence (NBAS) cause a pleiotropic multisystem disorder. Three clinical subgroups have been defined correlating with the localisation of pathogenic variants in the NBAS gene: variants affecting the C-terminal region of NBAS result in SOPH syn...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular genetics and metabolism 2024-03, Vol.141 (3), p.108118-108118, Article 108118
Hauptverfasser: Hammann, Nicole, Lenz, Dominic, Baric, Ivo, Crushell, Ellen, Vici, Carlo Dionisi, Distelmaier, Felix, Feillet, Francois, Freisinger, Peter, Hempel, Maja, Khoreva, Anna L., Laass, Martin W., Lacassie, Yves, Lainka, Elke, Larson-Nath, Catherine, Li, Zhongdie, Lipiński, Patryk, Lurz, Eberhard, Mégarbané, André, Nobre, Susana, Olivieri, Giorgia, Peters, Bianca, Prontera, Paolo, Schlieben, Lea D., Seroogy, Christine M., Sobacchi, Cristina, Suzuki, Shigeru, Tran, Christel, Vockley, Jerry, Wang, Jian-She, Wagner, Matias, Prokisch, Holger, Garbade, Sven F., Kölker, Stefan, Hoffmann, Georg F., Staufner, Christian
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Zusammenfassung:Biallelic pathogenic variants in neuroblastoma-amplified sequence (NBAS) cause a pleiotropic multisystem disorder. Three clinical subgroups have been defined correlating with the localisation of pathogenic variants in the NBAS gene: variants affecting the C-terminal region of NBAS result in SOPH syndrome (short stature, optic atrophy, Pelger-Huët anomaly), variants affecting the Sec 39 domain are associated with infantile liver failure syndrome type 2 (ILFS2) and variants affecting the ß-propeller domain give rise to a combined phenotype. However, there is still unexplained phenotypic diversity across the three subgroups, challenging the current concept of genotype-phenotype correlations in NBAS-associated disease. Therefore, besides examining the genetic influence, we aim to elucidate the potential impact of pre-symptomatic diagnosis, emergency management and other modifying variables on the clinical phenotype. We investigated genotype-phenotype correlations in individuals sharing the same genotypes (n = 30 individuals), and in those sharing the same missense variants with a loss-of-function variant in trans (n = 38 individuals). Effects of a pre-symptomatic diagnosis and emergency management on the severity of acute liver failure (ALF) episodes also were analysed, comparing liver function tests (ALAT, ASAT, INR) and mortality. A strong genotype-phenotype correlation was demonstrated in individuals sharing the same genotype; this was especially true for the ILFS2 subgroup. Genotype-phenotype correlation in patients sharing only one missense variant was still high, though at a lower level. Pre-symptomatic diagnosis in combination with an emergency management protocol leads to a trend of reduced severity of ALF. High genetic impact on clinical phenotype in NBAS-associated disease facilitates monitoring and management of affected patients sharing the same genotype. Pre-symptomatic diagnosis and an emergency management protocol do not prevent ALF but may reduce its clinical severity. •Very strong genotype-phenotype correlation in individuals sharing both NBAS variants•Strong correlation in individuals sharing one NBAS missense variant•Severity of ALF may be reduced by early diagnosis and emergency management.
ISSN:1096-7192
1096-7206
DOI:10.1016/j.ymgme.2023.108118