AI Article Synopsis

  • - The Aristaless-related homeobox gene on the X chromosome is crucial for brain development, with well-documented disorders in males, but less clear effects in females, who are often asymptomatic.
  • - This study examined 10 unpublished female patients with new pathogenic variants and reviewed 63 previously documented cases, revealing a diverse clinical spectrum among females with these variants.
  • - Findings indicated that 42.5% of female carriers are asymptomatic, while 41% exhibit severe symptoms like intellectual disability or developmental conditions, with a higher prevalence of severe phenotypes in those with de novo variants compared to inherited ones.

Article Abstract

The Aristaless-related homeobox () gene is located on the X chromosome and encodes a transcription factor that is essential for brain development. While the clinical spectrum of -related disorders is well described in males, from X linked lissencephaly with abnormal genitalia syndrome to syndromic and non-syndromic intellectual disability (ID), its phenotypic delineation in females is incomplete. Carrier females in families are usually asymptomatic, but ID has been reported in some of them, as well as in others with de novo variants. In this study, we collected the clinical and molecular data of 10 unpublished female patients with de novo pathogenic variants and reviewed the data of 63 females from the literature with either de novo variants (n=10), inherited variants (n=33) or variants of unknown inheritance (n=20). Altogether, the clinical spectrum of females with heterozygous pathogenic variants is broad: 42.5% are asymptomatic, 16.4% have isolated agenesis of the corpus callosum (ACC) or mild symptoms (learning disabilities, autism spectrum disorder, drug-responsive epilepsy) without ID, whereas 41% present with a severe phenotype (ie, ID or developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE)). The ID/DEE phenotype was significantly more prevalent in females carrying de novo variants (75%, n=15/20) versus in those carrying inherited variants (27.3%, n=9/33). ACC was observed in 66.7% (n=24/36) of females who underwent a brain MRI. By refining the clinical spectrum of females carrying pathogenic variants, we show that ID is a frequent sign in females with this X linked condition.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jmg-2023-109203DOI Listing

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