Expanding the Spectrum of KDM5C Neurodevelopmental Disorder: A Novel De Novo Stop Variant in a Young Woman and Emerging Genotype-Phenotype Correlations

As a consequence of the implementation of NGS technologies, the diagnostic yield of neurodevelopmental disorders has dramatically increased during the past two decades. Among neurodevelopmental genes, transcription-related genes and chromatin remodeling genes are the most represented category of dis...

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Veröffentlicht in:Genes 2022-12, Vol.13 (12), p.2266
Hauptverfasser: Lintas, Carla, Bottillo, Irene, Sacco, Roberto, Azzarà, Alessia, Cassano, Ilaria, Ciccone, Maria Pia, Grammatico, Paola, Gurrieri, Fiorella
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:As a consequence of the implementation of NGS technologies, the diagnostic yield of neurodevelopmental disorders has dramatically increased during the past two decades. Among neurodevelopmental genes, transcription-related genes and chromatin remodeling genes are the most represented category of disease-causing genes. Indeed, the term "chromatinopathies" is now widely used to describe epigenetic disorders caused by mutations in these genes. We hereby describe a twenty-seven-year-old female patient diagnosed with moderate intellectual disability comorbid with other neuropsychiatric and behavioral issues carrying a de novo heterozygous stop variant in the gene (NM_004187.5: c. 3847G>T, p.Glu1283*), encoding a histone demethylase that specifically acts on the H3K4 lysines. The gene is located on the X chromosome and has been associated with Claes-Jensen-type intellectual disability, an X-linked syndromic disorder. We discuss our case in relation to previously reported affected females harboring pathogenic mutations in the gene with the objective of delineating genotype-phenotype correlations and further defining a common recognizable phenotype. We also highlight the importance of reverse phenotyping in relation to whole-exome sequencing results.
ISSN:2073-4425
2073-4425
DOI:10.3390/genes13122266