1. Two siblings with Bosch-Boonstra-Schaaf optic atrophy syndrome due to parental gonadal mosaicism.
- Author
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van Renterghem V, Vilain C, Devriendt K, Casteels I, Smits G, Soblet J, and Balikova I
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Siblings, Mosaicism, Intellectual Disability genetics, Optic Atrophies, Hereditary genetics, Optic Atrophy genetics
- Abstract
Bosch-Boonstra-Schaaf Optic Atrophy Syndrome (BBSOAS, OMIM 615722) is a rare autosomal dominant disorder characterized by intellectual disability, optic atrophy, cortical visual impairment, mild facial dysmorphism, hypotonia, hearing problems, attention deficit and a thin corpus callosum. The gene underlying this disorder is NR2F1 located on chromosome 5q15 which encodes for a nuclear receptor protein. Mutations and deletions have been identified in patients. Here we report on a brother and a sister carrying a pathogenic nonsense NR2F1 variant. The patients have a mild phenotype showing optic atrophy, mild intellectual disability, dysmorphic features and thin corpus callosum. This correlates with previously described milder phenotypes in patients with mutations in this domain. The variant was not identified in the parental genome indicating most likely a gonadal mosaicism. Gonadal mosaicism has not yet been reported in Bosch-Boonstra-Schaaf Optic Atrophy Syndrome., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest We declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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