Monogenic disorders that mimic the phenotype of Rett syndrome
Rett syndrome (RTT) is caused by mutations in methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 ( MECP2 ), but defects in a handful of other genes (e.g., CDKL5 , FOXG1 , MEF2C ) can lead to presentations that resemble, but do not completely mirror, classical RTT. In this study, we attempted to identify other monogenic d...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Neurogenetics 2018, Vol.19 (1), p.41-47 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Rett syndrome (RTT) is caused by mutations in methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 (
MECP2
), but defects in a handful of other genes (e.g.,
CDKL5
,
FOXG1
,
MEF2C
) can lead to presentations that resemble, but do not completely mirror, classical RTT. In this study, we attempted to identify other monogenic disorders that share features with RTT. We performed a retrospective chart review on
n
= 319 patients who had undergone clinical whole exome sequencing (WES) for further etiological evaluation of neurodevelopmental diagnoses that remained unexplained despite extensive prior workup. From this group, we characterized those who (1) possessed features that were compatible with RTT based on clinical judgment, (2) subsequently underwent
MECP2
sequencing and/or
MECP2
deletion/duplication analysis with negative results, and (3) ultimately arrived at a diagnosis other than RTT with WES.
n
= 7 patients had clinical features overlapping RTT with negative
MECP2
analysis but positive WES providing a diagnosis. These seven patients collectively possessed pathogenic variants in six different genes: two in
KCNB1
and one each in
FOXG1
,
IQSEC2
,
MEIS2
,
TCF4
, and
WDR45
.
n
= 2 (both with
KCNB1
variants) fulfilled criteria for atypical RTT. RTT-associated features included the following: loss of hand or language skills (
n
= 3;
IQSEC2
,
KCNB1
x 2); disrupted sleep (
n
= 4;
KNCB1
,
MEIS2
,
TCF4
,
WDR45
); stereotyped hand movements (
n
= 5;
FOXG1
,
KNCB1
x 2,
MEIS2
,
TCF4
); bruxism (
n
= 3;
KCNB1
x 2;
TCF4
); and hypotonia (
n
= 7). Clinically based diagnoses can be misleading, evident by the increasing number of genetic conditions associated with features of RTT with negative
MECP2
mutations. |
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ISSN: | 1364-6745 1364-6753 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10048-017-0535-3 |