학술논문

KAT6A Syndrome: genotype–phenotype correlation in 76 patients with pathogenic KAT6A variants
Document Type
article
Source
Genetics in Medicine. 21(4)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Genetics
Prevention
Brain Disorders
Rare Diseases
Pediatric
Clinical Research
Digestive Diseases
Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD)
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Adolescent
Adult
Child
Child
Preschool
Chromosome Deletion
Developmental Disabilities
Exome
Female
Genetic Association Studies
Genotype
Histone Acetyltransferases
Humans
Infant
Intellectual Disability
Male
Microcephaly
Mutation
Phenotype
Protein Isoforms
Young Adult
genetic diagnosis
phenotypic spectrum
KAT6A syndrome
chromatin modifiers
intellectual disability
DDD Study
KAT6A syndrome
chromatin modifiers
intellectual disability
Clinical Sciences
Genetics & Heredity
Language
Abstract
PurposePathogenic variants in KAT6A have recently been identified as a cause of syndromic developmental delay. Within 2 years, the number of patients identified with pathogenic KAT6A variants has rapidly expanded and the full extent and variability of the clinical phenotype has not been reported.MethodsWe obtained data for patients with KAT6A pathogenic variants through three sources: treating clinicians, an online family survey distributed through social media, and a literature review.ResultsWe identified 52 unreported cases, bringing the total number of published cases to 76. Our results expand the genotypic spectrum of pathogenic variants to include missense and splicing mutations. We functionally validated a pathogenic splice-site variant and identified a likely hotspot location for de novo missense variants. The majority of clinical features in KAT6A syndrome have highly variable penetrance. For core features such as intellectual disability, speech delay, microcephaly, cardiac anomalies, and gastrointestinal complications, genotype- phenotype correlations show that late-truncating pathogenic variants (exons 16-17) are significantly more prevalent. We highlight novel associations, including an increased risk of gastrointestinal obstruction.ConclusionOur data expand the genotypic and phenotypic spectrum for individuals with genetic pathogenic variants in KAT6A and we outline appropriate clinical management.