학술논문

A boy with a progressive neurologic decline harboring two coexisting mutations in KMT2D and VPS13D.
Document Type
Article
Source
Brain & Development. Nov2023, Vol. 45 Issue 10, p603-607. 5p.
Subject
*PROGNOSIS
*HEARING disorders
*SPINOCEREBELLAR ataxia
*TANDEM mass spectrometry
*MITOCHONDRIAL DNA
*RECESSIVE genes
*PITUITARY dwarfism
Language
ISSN
0387-7604
Abstract
Kabuki syndrome (KS) and spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA) are both rare conditions with neurodevelopmental abnormalities. Approaching a patient with complex phenotypes and differentiating the role of mutations may be beneficial but challenging in predicting the disease prognosis. A boy presented with progressive ataxia, developmental regression, and myoclonus since 4 years of age. Additional features included growth hormone deficiency, excessive body hair, dysmorphic facies, hypoparathyroidism, and bilateral sensorineural hearing impairment. Brain magnetic resonance imaging depicted T2-weighted hyperintensities over bilateral globus pallidus, thalamus, subcortical white matter, and brainstem. The results of tandem mass spectrometry, mitochondrial deletion, and mitochondrial DNA sequencing were inconclusive. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) on genomic DNA obtained from peripheral blood cells revealed a known pathogenic variant at KMT2D gene (c.5993A > G, p.Tyr1998Cys) related to KS and two compound heterozygous, likely pathogenic variants at VPS13D gene (c.908G > A, p.Arg303Gln and c.8561T > G, p.Leu2854Arg) related to autosomal recessive SCA type 4 (SCAR4). SCAR4 is mainly adult-onset, but a few pediatric cases have recently been reported with progressive gait instability and developmental delay. The VPS13D gene has been suggested to play a role in mitochondrial size, autophagy, and clearance, thus explaining the clinical and imaging phenotypes. Our case showed a rare co-existence of KS and SCAR4, highlighting the utility of WES in atypical cases that a single-gene disease cannot fully explain. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]