| Literature DB >> 34421500 |
Viviane Freitas de Castro1,2, Daniel Mattos1,2, Flavia Martinez de Carvalho2,3, Denise Pontes Cavalcanti4, Milagros M Duenas-Roque5, Juan Llerena2,6, Viviana Raquel Cosentino7, Rachel Sayuri Honjo8, Julio Cesar Loguercio Leite9, Maria Teresa Sanseverino9, Márcia Pereira Alves de Souza10, Pricila Bernardi11, Ana Maria Bolognese12, Luiz Carlos Santana da Silva2,13, Pablo Barbero14, Patricia Santana Correia6, Larissa Souza Mario Bueno15, Clarice Pagani Savastano1, Iêda Maria Orioli1,2.
Abstract
Holoprosencephaly (HPE) is the failure of the embryonic forebrain to develop into 2 hemispheres promoting midline cerebral and facial defects. The wide phenotypic variability and causal heterogeneity make genetic counseling difficult. Heterozygous variants with incomplete penetrance and variable expressivity in the SHH, SIX3, ZIC2, and TGIF1 genes explain ∼25% of the known causes of nonchromosomal HPE. We studied these 4 genes and clinically described 27 Latin American families presenting with nonchromosomal HPE. Three new SHH variants and a third known SIX3 likely pathogenic variant found by Sanger sequencing explained 15% of our cases. Genotype-phenotype correlation in these 4 families and published families with identical or similar driver gene, mutated domain, conservation of residue in other species, and the type of variant explain the pathogenicity but not the phenotypic variability. Nine patients, including 2 with SHH pathogenic variants, presented benign variants of the SHH, SIX3, ZIC2, and TGIF1 genes with potential alteration of splicing, a causal proposition in need of further studies. Finding more families with the same SIX3 variant may allow further identification of genetic or environmental modifiers explaining its variable phenotypic expression.Entities:
Keywords: Holoprosencephaly; Latin American populations; SHH; SIX3; Synonymous variants; TGIF1; ZIC2
Year: 2021 PMID: 34421500 PMCID: PMC8339482 DOI: 10.1159/000515044
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Syndromol ISSN: 1661-8769