1. Phenotypic Expansion of Autosomal Dominant LZTR1 -Related Disorders with Special Emphasis on Adult-Onset Features.
- Author
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Uliana V, Ambrosini E, Taiani A, Cesarini S, Cannizzaro IR, Negrotti A, Serra W, Quintavalle G, Micale L, Fusco C, Castori M, Martorana D, Bortesi B, Belli L, Percesepe A, Pisani F, and Barili V
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Neurofibromatoses genetics, Neurofibromatoses pathology, Trans-Activators genetics, Skin Neoplasms genetics, Skin Neoplasms pathology, Age of Onset, Transcription Factors genetics, Parkinson Disease genetics, Parkinson Disease pathology, Middle Aged, Genes, Dominant, Mutation, Phenotype, Noonan Syndrome genetics, Noonan Syndrome pathology, Neurilemmoma genetics, Neurilemmoma pathology
- Abstract
Leucine zipper-like transcription regulator 1 (LZTR1) acts as a negative factor that suppresses RAS function and MAPK signaling; mutations in this protein may dysregulate RAS ubiquitination and lead to impaired degradation of RAS superfamily proteins. Germline LZTR1 variants are reported in Noonan syndrome, either autosomal dominant or autosomal recessive, and in susceptibility to schwannomatosis. This article explores the genetic and phenotypic diversity of the autosomal dominant LZTR1 -related disorders, compiling a cohort of previously published patients (51 with the Noonan phenotype and 123 with schwannomatosis) and presenting two additional adult-onset cases: a male with schwannomatosis and Parkinson's disease and a female with Noonan syndrome, generalized joint hypermobility, and breast cancer. This review confirms that autosomal dominant LZTR1 -related disorders exhibit an extreme phenotypic variability, ranging from relatively mild manifestations to severe and multi-systemic involvement, and offers updated frequences of each clinical feature. The aim is to precisely define the clinical spectrum of LZTR1 -related diseases, using also two new emblematic clinical cases. Gaining insight into the mechanisms underneath this variability is crucial to achieve precision diagnostics and the development of therapeutic interventions.
- Published
- 2024
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