| Literature DB >> 34747546 |
Sara Nuovo1, Valentina Baglioni1, Roberta De Mori2, Silvia Tardivo2, Caterina Caputi1, Monia Ginevrino3,4, Alessia Micalizzi3, Laura Masuelli5, Giulia Federici6, Antonella Casella7,8, Elisa Lorefice9, Danila Anello10, Manuela Tolve5, Donatella Farini11,12, Enrico Bertini13, Ginevra Zanni13, Lorena Travaglini13, Gessica Vasco14, Claudio Sette12,15, Carla Carducci5, Enza M Valente7,8, Vincenzo Leuzzi1.
Abstract
Biallelic mutations in the BRAT1 gene, encoding BRCA1-associated ATM activator 1, result in variable phenotypes, from rigidity and multifocal seizure syndrome, lethal neonatal to neurodevelopmental disorder, and cerebellar atrophy with or without seizures, without obvious genotype-phenotype associations. We describe two families at the mildest end of the spectrum, differing in clinical presentation despite a common genotype at the BRAT1 locus. Two siblings displayed nonprogressive congenital ataxia and shrunken cerebellum on magnetic resonance imaging. A third unrelated patient showed normal neurodevelopment, adolescence-onset seizures, and ataxia, shrunken cerebellum, and ultrastructural abnormalities on skin biopsy, representing the mildest form of NEDCAS hitherto described. Exome sequencing identified the c.638dup and the novel c.1395G>A BRAT1 variants, the latter causing exon 10 skippings. The p53-MCL test revealed normal ATM kinase activity. Our findings broaden the allelic and clinical spectrum of BRAT1-related disease, which should be suspected in presence of nonprogressive cerebellar signs, even without a neurodevelopmental disorder.Entities:
Keywords: BRAT1; NEDCAS; nonprogressive congenital ataxia; phenotypic discordance; splicing variant
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34747546 DOI: 10.1002/humu.24293
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.700