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Novel patients with NHLRC2 variants expand the phenotypic spectrum of FINCA disease

Authors :
Antti Tallgren
Leo Kager
Gina O’Grady
Hannu Tuominen
Jarmo Körkkö
Outi Kuismin
Martha Feucht
Callum Wilson
Jana Behunova
Eleina England
Mitja I. Kurki
Aarno Palotie
Mikko Hallman
Riitta Kaarteenaho
Franco Laccone
Kaan Boztug
Reetta Hinttala
Johanna Uusimaa
Source :
Frontiers in Neuroscience, Vol 17 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2023.

Abstract

PurposeFINCA disease (Fibrosis, Neurodegeneration and Cerebral Angiomatosis, OMIM 618278) is an infantile-onset neurodevelopmental and multiorgan disease. Since our initial report in 2018, additional patients have been described. FINCA is the first human disease caused by recessive variants in the highly conserved NHLRC2 gene. Our previous studies have shown that Nhlrc2-null mouse embryos die during gastrulation, indicating the essential role of the protein in embryonic development. Defect in NHLRC2 leads to cerebral neurodegeneration and severe pulmonary, hepatic and cardiac fibrosis. Despite having a structure suggestive of an enzymatic role and the clinical importance of NHLRC2 in multiple organs, the specific physiological role of the protein is unknown.MethodsThe clinical histories of five novel FINCA patients diagnosed with whole exome sequencing were reviewed. Segregation analysis of the biallelic, potentially pathogenic NHLRC2 variants was performed using Sanger sequencing. Studies on neuropathology and NHLRC2 expression in different brain regions were performed on autopsy samples of three previously described deceased FINCA patients.ResultsOne patient was homozygous for the pathogenic variant c.442G > T, while the other four were compound heterozygous for this variant and two other pathogenic NHLRC2 gene variants. All five patients presented with multiorgan dysfunction with neurodevelopmental delay, recurrent infections and macrocytic anemia as key features. Interstitial lung disease was pronounced in infancy but often stabilized. Autopsy samples revealed widespread, albeit at a lower intensity than the control, NHLRC2 expression in the brain.ConclusionThis report expands on the characteristic clinical features of FINCA disease. Presentation is typically in infancy, and although patients can live to late adulthood, the key clinical and histopathological features are fibrosis, infection susceptibility/immunodeficiency/intellectual disability, neurodevelopmental disorder/neurodegeneration and chronic anemia/cerebral angiomatosis (hence the acronym FINCA) that enable an early diagnosis confirmed by genetic investigations.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1662453X
Volume :
17
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Neuroscience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.15fd5005cc54d2da58d74123763ff5c
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2023.1123327