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A 34-year-old Japanese patient exhibiting NBAS deficiency with a novel mutation and extended phenotypic variation

Authors :
Yusuke Tanahashi
Tokuo Mukai
Osamu Ueda
Kumihiro Matsuo
Yoshiya Ito
Akimasa Okuno
Shigeru Suzuki
Kenji Fujieda
Tsunehisa Nagamori
Akiko Furuya
Hiroshi Azuma
Takahide Kokumai
Koichi Yano
Source :
European journal of medical genetics. 63(11)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Biallelic neuroblastoma amplified sequence (NBAS) gene mutations have recently been identified to cause a reduction in its protein expression and a broad phenotypic spectrum, from isolated short stature, optic nerve atrophy, and Pelger-Huet anomaly (SOPH) syndrome or infantile liver failure syndrome 2 to a combined, multi-systemic disease including skeletal dysplasia and immunological and neurological abnormalities. Herein, we report a 34-year-old patient with a range of phenotypes for NBAS deficiency due to compound heterozygous variants; one is a SOPH-specific variant, p.Arg1914His, and the other is a novel splice site variant, c.6433-2A>G. The patient experienced recurrent acute liver failure until early childhood. Hypogammaglobulinemia, a decrease in natural killer cells, and optic nerve atrophy were evident from infancy to childhood. In adulthood, the patient exhibited novel phenotypic features such as hepatic cirrhosis complicated by portal hypertension and autoimmune hemolytic anemia. The patient also suffered from childhood-onset insulin-requiring diabetes with progressive beta cell dysfunction. The patient had severe short stature and exhibited dysmorphic features compatible with SOPH, intellectual disability, and epilepsy. NBAS protein expression in the patient's fibroblasts was severely low. RNA expression analysis for the c.6433-2A>G variant showed that this variant activated two cryptic splice sites in intron 49 and exon 50, for which the predicted consequences at the protein level were an in-frame deletion/insertion, p.(Ile2199_Asn2202delins16), and a premature termination codon, p.(Ile2199Tyrfs*17), respectively. These findings indicate that NBAS deficiency is a multi-systemic progressive disease. The results of this study extend the spectrum of clinical and genetic findings related to NBAS deficiency.

Details

ISSN :
18780849
Volume :
63
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European journal of medical genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d0cad460ee0832e149a777c3f7faf843