1. Stankiewicz-Isidor syndrome: expanding the clinical and molecular phenotype.
- Author
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Isidor B, Ebstein F, Hurst A, Vincent M, Bader I, Rudy NL, Cogne B, Mayr J, Brehm A, Bupp C, Warren K, Bacino CA, Gerard A, Ranells JD, Metcalfe KA, van Bever Y, Jiang YH, Mendelssohn BA, Cope H, Rosenfeld JA, Blackburn PR, Goodenberger ML, Kearney HM, Kennedy J, Scurr I, Szczaluba K, Ploski R, de Saint Martin A, Alembik Y, Piton A, Bruel AL, Thauvin-Robinet C, Strong A, Diderich KEM, Bourgeois D, Dahan K, Vignard V, Bonneau D, Colin E, Barth M, Camby C, Baujat G, Briceño I, Gómez A, Deb W, Conrad S, Besnard T, Bézieau S, Krüger E, Küry S, and Stankiewicz P
- Subjects
- Haploinsufficiency, Humans, Phenotype, Intellectual Disability diagnosis, Language Development Disorders genetics, Musculoskeletal Abnormalities genetics
- Abstract
Purpose: Haploinsufficiency of PSMD12 has been reported in individuals with neurodevelopmental phenotypes, including developmental delay/intellectual disability (DD/ID), facial dysmorphism, and congenital malformations, defined as Stankiewicz-Isidor syndrome (STISS). Investigations showed that pathogenic variants in PSMD12 perturb intracellular protein homeostasis. Our objective was to further explore the clinical and molecular phenotypic spectrum of STISS., Methods: We report 24 additional unrelated patients with STISS with various truncating single nucleotide variants or copy-number variant deletions involving PSMD12. We explore disease etiology by assessing patient cells and CRISPR/Cas9-engineered cell clones for various cellular pathways and inflammatory status., Results: The expressivity of most clinical features in STISS is highly variable. In addition to previously reported DD/ID, speech delay, cardiac and renal anomalies, we also confirmed preaxial hand abnormalities as a feature of this syndrome. Of note, 2 patients also showed chilblains resembling signs observed in interferonopathy. Remarkably, our data show that STISS patient cells exhibit a profound remodeling of the mTORC1 and mitophagy pathways with an induction of type I interferon-stimulated genes., Conclusion: We refine the phenotype of STISS and show that it can be clinically recognizable and biochemically diagnosed by a type I interferon gene signature., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest The Department of Molecular and Human Genetics at Baylor College of Medicine receives revenue from clinical genetic testing conducted at Baylor Genetics. The other authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2021 American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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