Crisponi syndrome (CS) and cold-induced sweating syndrome type 1 (CISS1) share clinical characteristics, such as dysmorphic features, muscle contractions, scoliosis, and cold-induced sweating, with CS patients showing a severe clinical course in infancy involving hyperthermia associated with death in most cases in the first years of life. To date, 24 distinct CRLF1 mutations have been found either in homozygosity or in compound heterozygosity in CS/CISS1 patients, with the highest prevalence in Sardinia, Turkey, and Spain. By reporting 11 novel CRLF1 mutations, here we expand the mutational spectrum of CRLF1 in the CS/CISS1 syndrome to a total of 35 variants and present an overview of the different molecular and clinical features of all of them. To catalog all the 35 mutations, we created a CRLF1 mutations database, based on the Leiden Open (source) Variation Database (LOVD) system (https://grenada.lumc.nl/LOVD2/mendelian_genes/variants). Overall, the available functional and clinical data support the fact that both syndromes actually represent manifestations of the same autosomal-recessive disorder caused by mutations in the CRLF1 gene. Therefore, we propose to rename the two overlapping entities with the broader term of Crisponi/CISS1 syndrome.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/humu.22522 | DOI Listing |
Indian J Pediatr
November 2022
Department of Clinical Genetics, Christian Medical College, 632002, Vellore, Tamil Nadu, India.
Crisponi syndrome (CS) is a rare autosomal recessive syndrome, characterized by episodic facial muscle contraction with trismus, abundant salivation along with intermittent hyperthermia, feeding difficulties, characteristic facial dysmorphism, and camptodactyly. Here the authors report two South Indian neonates with confirmed diagnosis of Crisponi syndrome, caused by novel pathogenic variants in cytokine receptor-like factor 1 (CRLF1) gene. The classical clinical findings observed in the present cases were feeding difficulty, facial dysmorphism, tachypnea, contractures, camptodactyly, opisthotonus, hyperthermia, poor growth, and facial muscle contraction resembling probable tetanus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Med Genet
July 2021
Department of Pediatric Genetics, Department of Pediatrics, Hacettepe University Faculty of Medicine, Ankara, Turkey.
Crisponi syndrome/Cold Induced Sweating Syndrome 1 (CS/CISS1) is a rare, autosomal recessive, multisystemic disease. Hyperthermia attacks, abnormal contractions in the muscles of the face and oropharynx, respiratory distress, camptodactyly, and swallowing difficulty are the main features of the condition in the neonatal period. Patients experience cold-induced sweating attacks and progressive kyphoscoliosis in childhood and adolescence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndian Pediatr
November 2020
Istituto di Ricerca Genetica e Biomedica, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Monserrato (CA), Italy.
Braz J Anesthesiol
July 2021
Aix Marseille University, APHM, La Timone Teaching Hospital, Department of Pediatric Anesthesia and Intensive Care Unit, Marseille, France.
Crisponi syndrome is a rare and severe heritable disorder characterised by muscle contractions, trismus, apnea, feeding troubles, and unexplained high fever spikes with multiple organ failure. Here we report perioperative care for endoscopic gastrostomy of a 17 month-old female child with Crisponi syndrome. Temperature in the surgery room was strictly monitored and maintained at 19 °C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStem Cell Res
July 2020
Department of General Pediatrics, Muenster University Children's Hospital, Muenster, Germany.
Cytokine receptor like factor 1 (CRLF1) is the gene implicated, when mutated, in Crisponi syndrome/cold-induced sweating syndrome type 1 (CS/CISS1). Here, we report the establishment of induced pluripotent stem cell lines (iPSCs) from fibroblasts of a Turkish CS/CISS1 individual with a homozygous variant in CRLF1 (c.708_709delinsT; p.
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