Objective: To explore the genetic etiology of a child with Pitt-Hopkins syndrome.
Methods: A child who had presented at the Medical Genetics Center of Gansu Provincial Maternal and Child Health Care Hospital on February 24, 2021 and his parents were selected as the study subjects. Clinical data of the child was collected. Genomic DNA was extracted from peripheral blood samples of the child and his parents and subjected to trio-whole exome sequencing (trio-WES). Candidate variant was verified by Sanger sequencing. Karyotype analysis was also carried out for the child, and her mother was subjected to ultra-deep sequencing and prenatal diagnosis upon her subsequent pregnancy.
Results: The clinical manifestations of the proband included facial dysmorphism, Simian crease, and mental retardation. Genetic testing revealed that he has carried a heterozygous c.1762C>T (p.Arg588Cys) variant of the TCF4 gene, for which both parents had a wild-type. The variant was unreported previously and was rated as likely pathogenic based on the guidelines of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG). Ultra-deep sequencing indicated that the variant has a proportion of 2.63% in the mother, suggesting the presence of low percentage mosaicism. Prenatal diagnosis of amniotic fluid sample suggested that the fetus did not carry the same variant.
Conclusion: The heterozygous c.1762C>T variant of the TCF4 gene probably underlay the disease in this child and has derived from the low percentage mosaicism in his mother.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3760/cma.j.cn511374-20220826-00581 | DOI Listing |
Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry
January 2025
Institute of Neuropsychiatry, The Affiliated Brain Hospital of Nanjing Medical University, Nanjing 210029, China; Department of Psychiatry, The Affiliated Brain Hospital of Nanjing Medical University, Nanjing 210029, China. Electronic address:
Background: Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is a chronic metabolic disorder that has high comorbidity with mental disorders. The genetic relationships between T2D and depression are far from being well understood.
Methods: We performed genetic correlation, polygenic overlap, Mendelian randomization (MR) analyses, cross-trait meta-analysis, and Bayesian colocalization analysis to assess genetic relationships between T2D and depression, in the forms of major depressive disorder (MDD) and depressed affect (DAF).
Vavilovskii Zhurnal Genet Selektsii
November 2024
Research Institute of Medical Genetics, Tomsk National Research Medical Center of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Tomsk, Russia.
Our understanding of human genes - particularly their structure, functions, and regulatory mechanisms - is still limited. The biological role of approximately 20 % of human proteins has not been established yet, and the molecular functions of the known part of the proteome remain poorly understood. This hinders progress in basic and applied biological and medical sciences, especially in treating hereditary diseases, which are caused by mutations and polymorphic variants in individual genes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLeukemia
December 2024
Department of Laboratory medicine, Laboratory of Hematology, Radboud University medical center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Expansions and contractions of tandem DNA repeats are a source of genetic variation in human populations and in human tissues: some expanded repeats cause inherited disorders, and some are also somatically unstable. We analyzed DNA sequence data, derived from the blood cells of >700,000 participants in UK Biobank and the Research Program, and developed new computational approaches to recognize, measure and learn from DNA-repeat instability at 15 highly polymorphic CAG-repeat loci. We found that expansion and contraction rates varied widely across these 15 loci, even for alleles of the same length; repeats at different loci also exhibited widely variable relative propensities to mutate in the germline versus the blood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChildren (Basel)
November 2024
Rare Diseases Center, Istituto Dermopatico dell'Immacolata, IDI-IRCCS, 00167 Rome, Italy.
Background: Monoallelic damaging variants in (MIM*612870), encoding the Pleckstrin Homology Domain Interacting Protein, have been associated with a novel neurodevelopmental disorder, also termed Chung-Jansen syndrome (CHUJANS, MIM#617991). Most of the described individuals show developmental delay (DD)/intellectual disability (ID), obesity/overweight, and variable congenital anomalies, so the condition can be considered as an ID-overweight syndrome.
Case Description: We evaluated a child presenting with DD/ID and a craniofacial phenotype reminiscent of a Pitt-Hopkins syndrome (PTHS)-like condition.
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