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2 result(s) for "Al-Fadhli, Fatima M."
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Clinical characterization and further confirmation of the autosomal recessive SLC12A2 disease
Heterozygous pathogenic variants in SLC12A2 are reported in patients with nonsyndromic hearing loss. Recently, homozygous loss-of-function variants have been reported in two patients with syndromic intellectual disability, with or without hearing loss. However, the clinical and molecular spectrum of SLC12A2 disease has yet to be characterized and confirmed. Using whole-exome sequencing, we detected a homozygous splicing variant in four patients from two independent families with severe developmental delay, microcephaly, respiratory abnormalities, and subtle dysmorphic features, with or without congenital hearing loss. We also reviewed the reported cases with pathogenic variants associated with autosomal dominant and recessive forms of the SLC12A2 disease. About 50% of the cases have syndromic and nonsyndromic congenital hearing loss. All patients harboring the recessive forms of the disease presented with severe global developmental delay. Interestingly, all reported variants are located in the c-terminal domain, suggesting a critical role of this domain for the proper function of the encoded co-transporter protein. In conclusion, our study provides an additional confirmation of the autosomal recessive SLC12A2 disease.
Mutations in CIT, encoding citron rho-interacting serine/threonine kinase, cause severe primary microcephaly in humans
Primary microcephaly is a clinical phenotype in which the head circumference is significantly reduced at birth due to abnormal brain development, primarily at the cortical level. Despite the marked genetic heterogeneity, most primary microcephaly-linked genes converge on mitosis regulation. Two consanguineous families segregating the phenotype of severe primary microcephaly, spasticity and failure to thrive had overlapping autozygomes in which exome sequencing identified homozygous splicing variants in CIT that segregate with the phenotype within each family. CIT encodes citron, an effector of the Rho signaling that is required for cytokinesis specifically in proliferating neuroprogenitors, as well as for postnatal brain development. In agreement with the critical role assigned to the kinase domain in effecting these biological roles, we show that both splicing variants predict variable disruption of this domain. The striking phenotypic overlap between CIT -mutated individuals and the knockout mice and rats that are specifically deficient in the kinase domain supports the proposed causal link between CIT mutation and primary microcephaly in humans.