| Literature DB >> 32904102 |
Yuval E Landau1,2, Gali Heimer3,4, Ortal Barel5, Nechama Shalva1, Dina Marek-Yagel1, Alvit Veber1, Elisheva Javasky5, Aya Shilon6, Andreea Nissenkorn3, Bruria Ben-Zeev3, Yair Anikster1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Peroxisomal D-bifunctional protein (DBP) deficiency is an autosomal recessive disorder historically described as a Zellweger-like syndrome comprising neonatal seizures, retinopathy, hearing loss, dysmorphic features, and other complications. The HSD17B4 gene encodes DBP which is essential for oxidation of peroxisomal substrates. We describe 4 patients - 2 unrelated female girls and 2 monozygotic twin sisters - with DBP deficiency and phenotypic diversity. PATIENT REPORTS: Patient 1 presented neonatally with hypotonia and seizures, and later on developed global developmental delay and regression, sensorineural hearing loss, nystagmus and cortical blindness. The brain MRI demonstrated bilateral peri-sylvian polymicrogyria. Whole exome sequencing revealed 2 mutations in the HSD17B4 gene (c.752G>A, p.(Arg251Gln); c.868 + 1delG).Patient 2 presented with hypotonia, motor delay, and sensorineural hearing loss in infancy, considerable developmental regression during her fourth year, nystagmus, and peripheral neuropathy. Brain MRI demonstrated cerebellar atrophy and abnormal basal ganglia and white matter signal, which appeared after the age of two years. Whole exome sequencing revealed 2 mutations in the HSD17B4 gene (c.14 T>G, p.(Leu5Arg); c.752G>A, p.(Arg251Gln)).Patients 3 and 4, two female monozygotic twins, presented with hypotonia, developmental delay, and macrocephaly from birth, and later on also sensorineural hearing loss, infantile spasms and hypsarrhythmia, and adrenal insufficiency. Brain MRI demonstrated delayed myelination, and an assay of peroxisomal beta oxidation suggested DBP deficiency. Sequencing of the HSD17B4 gene revealed the same 2 mutations as in patient 1. DISCUSSION: We describe 4 patients with variable and diverse clinical picture of DBP deficiency and particularly emphasize the clinical, biochemical, and neuroimaging characteristics. Interestingly, the clinical phenotype varied even between patients with the exact two mutations in the HSD17B4 gene. In addition, in two of the three patients in whom levels of VLCFA including phytanic acid were measured, the levels were within normal limits. This is expanding further the clinical spectrum of this disorder, which should be considered in the differential diagnosis of every patient with hypotonia and developmental delay especially if accompanied by polymicrogyria, seizures, sensorineural hearing loss, or adrenal insufficiency regardless of their VLCFA profile.Entities:
Keywords: D-bifunctional protein; Neonatal seizures; Peroxisomal; Retinopathy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32904102 PMCID: PMC7451421 DOI: 10.1016/j.ymgmr.2020.100631
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Genet Metab Rep ISSN: 2214-4269
Clinical, biochemical and molecular aspect of the patients. nt - not tested.
| Patient 1 | Patient 2 | Patient 3 | Patient 4 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical | Age of onset | neonatal period | first months | neonatal period | neonatal period |
| Age at last follow-up | 3.9 years | 9 years | 8 months (death) | 4 years | |
| Seizures | + | no | + hypsarrhythmia | + hypsarrhythmia | |
| Developmental delay | + | + | + | + | |
| Axial hypotonia | + | + | + | + | |
| Visual Abnormalities | + | no | + | + | |
| Hearing impairment | + | + | + | + | |
| Other complications | death | no | ARDS; death (8 months) | Adrenal insufficiency | |
| Brain MRI | 1 week of age: suspected mild bilateral sylvian fissure cortical irregularities | At 5 years (but not at 2 years) cerebellar atrophy, diffuse abnormal signal in basal ganglia and in cerebral and cerebellar white matter | delayed white matter maturation, enlarged ventricles, and extra-axial fluid. | abnormal periventricular white matter signal, thin corpus callosum, mild cerebellar atrophy, and extra-axial fluid. | |
| Biochemical | C22:0 [41.1–90.3 μM] | 50.5; 39.2 | 60.1 | nt | 39 |
| C24:0 [37.4–74.9 μM] | 67.9; 43 | 55.1 | nt | − | |
| C26:0 [0.6–1.2 μM] | 3.24; 1.18 | 1.07 | nt | − | |
| C24:0/C22:0 [0.689–1.008] | 1.345; 1.097 | 0.917 | nt | 0.93 | |
| C26:0/C22:0 [0.011–0.022] | 0.064; 0.03 | 0.018 | nt | 0.017 | |
| Phytanic acid [0.3–11.5 μM] | 0.1; 0.13 | 2 | nt | 3.7 | |
| 3-hydroxy-acylCoA dehydrogenase | nt | nt | nt | completely deficient | |
| Molecular | Molecular analysis of the | c.752G>A p.(Arg251Gln) and c.868 + 1delG | c.14 T>G p.(Leu5Arg) and c.752G>A [p.Arg251Gln] | nt | c.752G>A p.(Arg251Gln) and c.868 + 1delG |
Fig. 1Brain MRI of the patients. A. An axial T2 Flair sequence of patient #1 at 6 days of age demonstrating mild bilateral peri-sylvian polymicrogyria (arrow). B. Patient #2 - MRI performed at 5 years. Significant cerebellar atrophy and mild cerebral atrophy are noted on the sagittal T1 view (B-1) and abnormal signal in the dentate and cerebral WM are demonstrated in the coronal T2 view (B-2) (arrows). C. Patients #3–4. C1) An axial T2 sequence of patient #3 at 8 months of age - delayed white matter maturation, enlarged ventricles, and extra-axial fluid; C-2) An axial T2 sequence of patient #4 at 18 months of age demonstrating abnormal periventricular white matter signal (arrow); C-3) A sagittal T1 sequence of patient #4 at 18 months of age showing thin corpus callosum (arrow), mild cerebellar atrophy, and extra-axial fluid.
Description of the HSD17B4 mutations. NA - not available.
| Mutation 1 | Mutation 2 | Mutation 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Genomic change (hg19, GRCh37) | g.chr5:118829525G > A | g.chr5:118829641delG | g.chr5:118788284 T > G |
| Transcript change – Varsome (NM_000414.4) | c.752G>A | c.868 + 1delG | c.14 T>G |
| Variant type | Missense | Splicing | Missense |
| Protein change | p.Arg251Gln | Intron 11 of 23 splicing | p.Leu5Arg |
| Allele frequency in gnomAD | 0.00002393 (6/250,782 Alleles) | 0.00001594 (4/250,944 Alleles) | 0.00001196 (3/250,938 Alleles) |
| Prediction tool results | |||
| SIFT | Damaging (0.003) | NA | Damaging (0) |
| Polyphen2_HDIV | Damaging (0.991) | NA | Damaging (0.946) |
| Polyphen2_HVAR | Pathogenic (0.735) | NA | Damaging (0.823) |
| LRT | Deleterious (0.000001) | NA | Deleterious (0.000001) |
| MutationTaster | Disease causing (0.9999) | NA | Disease causing (0.9998) |
| MutationAssessor | Medium (3.445) | NA | Low (0.84) |
| FATHMM | Damaging (−2.52) | NA | Damaging (−2.62) |
| MetaSVM | Damaging (0.9151) | NA | Damaging (0.6042) |
| MetaLR | Damaging (0.8405) | NA | Damaging (0.7508) |
This mutation cannot be assessed by the above in silico prediction tools since it is a nonsense mutation. According to Varsome database it is defined as “pathogenic”.
Fig. 2D-Bifunctional Protein structure and mutations. SCP-2 L. C-terminal sterol carrier protein 2-like domain.