INTRODUCTION: Mutations in the GLI-similar 3 (GLIS3) gene encoding the transcription factor GLIS3 are a rare cause of neonatal diabetes and congenital hypothyroidism with six affected cases from three families reported to date. Additional features, described previously, include congenital glaucoma, hepatic fibrosis, polycystic kidneys, developmental delay and facial dysmorphism. SUBJECTS: We report two new cases from unrelated families with distinct novel homozygous partial GLIS3 deletions. Both patients presented with neonatal diabetes mellitus, severe resistant hypothyroidism in the presence of elevated thyroglobulin and normal thyroid anatomy, degenerative liver disease, cystic renal dysplasia, recurrent infections and facial dysmorphism. These novel mutations have also resulted in osteopenia, bilateral sensorineural deafness and pancreatic exocrine insufficiency, features that have not previously been associated with GLIS3 mutations. Gene dosage analysis showed that the parents were carriers of a deletion encompassing exons 1-2 (case 1) or exons 1-4 (case 2) of the 11 exon gene. Genome-wide SNP analysis did not reveal a common ancestral GLIS3 haplotype in patient 2. CONCLUSIONS: Our results confirm partial gene deletions as the most common type of GLIS3 mutations, accounting for four of five families identified to date. We propose that mutations in GLIS3 lead to a wider clinical phenotype than previously recognised. We also report the first case of a recessive GLIS3 mutation causing neonatal diabetes and congenital hypothyroidism in a child from a non-consanguineous pedigree, highlighting the importance of molecular genetic testing in any patient with this phenotype.
INTRODUCTION: Mutations in the GLI-similar 3 (GLIS3) gene encoding the transcription factor GLIS3 are a rare cause of neonatal diabetes and congenital hypothyroidism with six affected cases from three families reported to date. Additional features, described previously, include congenital glaucoma, hepatic fibrosis, polycystic kidneys, developmental delay and facial dysmorphism. SUBJECTS: We report two new cases from unrelated families with distinct novel homozygous partial GLIS3 deletions. Both patients presented with neonatal diabetes mellitus, severe resistant hypothyroidism in the presence of elevated thyroglobulin and normal thyroid anatomy, degenerative liver disease, cystic renal dysplasia, recurrent infections and facial dysmorphism. These novel mutations have also resulted in osteopenia, bilateral sensorineural deafness and pancreatic exocrine insufficiency, features that have not previously been associated with GLIS3 mutations. Gene dosage analysis showed that the parents were carriers of a deletion encompassing exons 1-2 (case 1) or exons 1-4 (case 2) of the 11 exon gene. Genome-wide SNP analysis did not reveal a common ancestral GLIS3 haplotype in patient 2. CONCLUSIONS: Our results confirm partial gene deletions as the most common type of GLIS3 mutations, accounting for four of five families identified to date. We propose that mutations in GLIS3 lead to a wider clinical phenotype than previously recognised. We also report the first case of a recessive GLIS3 mutation causing neonatal diabetes and congenital hypothyroidism in a child from a non-consanguineous pedigree, highlighting the importance of molecular genetic testing in any patient with this phenotype.
Authors: Hong Soon Kang; Dhirendra Kumar; Grace Liao; Kristin Lichti-Kaiser; Kevin Gerrish; Xiao-Hui Liao; Samuel Refetoff; Raja Jothi; Anton M Jetten Journal: J Clin Invest Date: 2017-10-30 Impact factor: 14.808
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Authors: Pauline E Schneeberger; Fanny Kortüm; Georg Christoph Korenke; Malik Alawi; René Santer; Mathias Woidy; Daniela Buhas; Stephanie Fox; Jane Juusola; Majid Alfadhel; Bryn D Webb; Emanuele G Coci; Rami Abou Jamra; Manuela Siekmeyer; Saskia Biskup; Corina Heller; Esther M Maier; Poupak Javaher-Haghighi; Maria F Bedeschi; Paola F Ajmone; Maria Iascone; Hilde Peeters; Katleen Ballon; Jaak Jaeken; Aroa Rodríguez Alonso; María Palomares-Bralo; Fernando Santos-Simarro; Marije E C Meuwissen; Diane Beysen; R Frank Kooy; Henry Houlden; David Murphy; Mohammad Doosti; Ehsan G Karimiani; Majid Mojarrad; Reza Maroofian; Lenka Noskova; Stanislav Kmoch; Tomas Honzik; Heidi Cope; Amarilis Sanchez-Valle; Bruce D Gelb; Ingo Kurth; Maja Hempel; Kerstin Kutsche Journal: Brain Date: 2020-08-01 Impact factor: 13.501