| Literature DB >> 34440332 |
Carlotta Spagnoli1, Carlo Fusco1, Francesco Pisani2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Progress in the clinical application of next-generation-sequencing-based techniques has resulted in a dramatic increase in the recognized genetic heterogeneity of the Rett syndrome spectrum (RSS). Our awareness of the considerable overlap with pediatric-onset epilepsies and epileptic/developmental encephalopathies (EE/DE) genes is also growing, and the presence of variable clinical features inside a general frame of commonalities has drawn renewed attention into deep phenotyping.Entities:
Keywords: Rett syndrome; Rett syndrome spectrum; Rett-like; epilepsy; epileptic and developmental encephalopathies; movements disorders; neurogenetics; stereotypies
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34440332 PMCID: PMC8394997 DOI: 10.3390/genes12081157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Neul’s criteria for typical and atypical Rett syndrome.
| Required for Typical RTT | Required for Atypical (Variant) RTT | Main Criteria | Exclusion Criteria for | Supportive Criteria |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
A period of regression followed by recovery or stabilization All main criteria and all exclusion criteria Supportive criteria: not required, although often present |
A period of regression followed by recovery or stabilization ≥2 out 4 main criteria 5 out of 11 supportive criteria |
Partial/complete loss of acquired purposeful hand skills Partial or complete loss of acquired spoken language Gait abnormalities: impaired (dyspraxic) or absent Stereotypic hand movements (hand wringing, squeezing, clapping, tapping, mouthing and washing/rubbing) |
Brain injury secondary to trauma, neurometabolic diseases, or severe infection causing neurological problems Grossly abnormal psychomotor development in the first 6 months of life |
Breathing disturbances when awake Bruxism when awake Impaired sleep pattern Abnormal muscle tone Peripheral vasomotor disturbances Scoliosis/kyphosis Growth retardation Small cold hand and feet |
Electroclinical characteristics of typical and atypical RTT syndrome.
| Typical RTT | ||
|---|---|---|
| Clinical Stages | Electroclinical Stages | Epilepsy Features |
| Early onset phase (6–12 months): | Stage I (Early epilepsy): | Deletions and intragenic variants: |
| EEG | EEG | EEG: |
| Stage 1: N/posterior rhythms slowing | Stage I: | Deletions and intragenic variants: |
Genes reviewed in this paper, with associated OMIM disorders, inheritance, reported clinical diagnoses within the Rett syndrome spectrum, number of patients and reference. As per OMIM nomenclature, the symbol “#” before a number indicates a descriptive entry (a phenotype), while “*” indicates a gene.
| GENE, Function/Name | Associated Disorder/OMIM# | Inheritance | Diagnosis within RSS Spectrum | REF |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DE/EE Genes | ||||
| Synapsis | ||||
| Synaptic Vesicle Cycle | ||||
| STXBP1 | DEE4 (#612164) | AD | Atypical: 7/12 | [ |
| Ion Channels | ||||
| SCN1A | Dravet syndrome (#607208) | AD | RTT-like (single case) | [ |
| SCN2A | DEE11 (#613721) | AD | Atypical: 1/2 | [ |
| SCN8A | DEE13(#614558) | AD | RTT-like (single case) | [ |
| KCNB1 | DEE26 (#616056) | AD | Typical: 1/3 | [ |
| KCNQ2 | DEE7 (#613720) | AD | RTT-like: 6/6 | [ |
| HCN1 | DEE24 (#615871) | AD | RTT-like (single case) | [ |
| KCNA2 | DEE32 (#616366) | AD | Atypical (single case) | [ |
| Receptors | ||||
| GABRB2 | EIEE2 (#617829) | AD | Typical (single case) | [ |
| GABRG2 | DEE74 (#618396) | AD | Atypical (single case) | [ |
| GABRB3 | DEE43 (#617113) | AD | RTT-like (single case) | [ |
| GABBR2 | DEE59 (#617904) | AD | Atypical (single case) | [ |
| GRIA2 | NDD with language impairment and behavioral abnormalities (#618917) | AD | RTT-like (single case) | [ |
| GRIN1 | NDD with/out hyperkinetic movements and seizures, AD (#614254) and AR (#617820) | AD, AR | RTT-like: 3/3 | [ |
| GRIN2B | DEE27 (#616139) | AD | RTT-like: 2/2 | [ |
| Transporters | ||||
| SLC6A1 | Myoclonic-atonic epilepsy (#616421) | AD | RTT-like: 1/2 | [ |
| SLC35A2 | CDG type II (#300896) | XLD, somatic mosaicism | RTT-like (single case) | [ |
| Transcription Factors/Chromatin Modulation Pathways | ||||
| MEF2C | MR, stereotypic movements, epilepsy and/or cerebral malformations (#613443) | AD | RTT-like: 8/9 | [ |
| ACTL6B | DEE76 (#618468) | ARAD | RTT-like (single case) | [ |
| HDAC4 | CdLS (#300882) | AD de novo deletion chr2.q37.1-q37.3 (including HDAC4)S | Atypical (single case) | [ |
| HDAC8 | CdLS (#300882) | XLD | RTT-like (single case) | [ |
| MEIS2 | Cleft palate, cardiac defects, and MR (#600987) | AD | RTT-like (single case) | [ |
| Ubiquitination | ||||
| RHOBTB2 | DEE64 (#618004) | AD | RTT-like (single case) | [ |
| HECW2 | NDD with hypotonia, seizures and absent language (#617268) | AD | RTT-like (single case) | [ |
| Axon Guidance | ||||
| NTNG1 | No OMIM disorder (gene number *608818) | AD | Atypical: 1/2 | [ |
| ID + E Genes | ||||
| IQSEC2 | MR, X-linked 1/78 (#309530) | XLD | RTT-like: 21/21 | [ |
| HNRNPH2 | MR, X-linked, syndromic, Bain type (#300986) | XLD | RTT-like (single case) | [ |
| EEF1A2 | DEE33 (#616409) | AD | RTT-like (single case) | [ |
| JMJD1C | No OMIM disorder (gene number *604503) | AD | Typical (single case) | [ |
| To Be Further Evaluated | ||||
| ANXA11 | ALS 23 (#617839) | AD | Atypical (single case) | [ |
| KIF4B | No OMIM disorder (gene number *609184) | AD | Atypical (single case) | [ |
|
| No OMIM disorder (gene number *605121) | AD | Atypical (single case) | [ |
Figure 1Neul’s inclusion and exclusion criteria applied to the reviewed cases according to genetic diagnosis (only genes with more than one reported case are shown), (A–H): microcephaly, regression, brain “injury”, grossly abnormal development in the first 6 months, hand skills regression, gait impairment, language regression, hand stereotypies.
Figure 2Neul’s supportive criteria in the cohort of reviewed cases, depicted according to genetic diagnosis (only genes with more than one reported case are shown).
Figure 3Known functional interaction networks between reviewed genes. A first network is represented by genes causative of Rett, atypical Rett syndrome and some of their most important differentials (Cornelia de Lange syndrome, Pitt–Hopkins and Pitt–Hopkins-like syndrome). A second network is presented by genes causing complex neurodevelopmental disorders in which epilepsy or DE/EE are a cardinal feature, mainly including receptors and ion channels. A third group is represented by genes with determined functional connections only between each other (HNRNPU and HNRNP2, encoding for RNA-binding proteins) and that currently lack known interactions within these networks.