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HIST1H1E heterozygous protein‐truncating variants cause a recognizable syndrome with intellectual disability and distinctive facial gestalt: A study to clarify the HIST1H1E syndrome phenotype in 30 individuals
- Source :
- American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A, American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A, Wiley, 2019, 179 (10), pp.2049-2055. ⟨10.1002/ajmg.a.61321⟩, Burkardt, D DC, Zachariou, A, Loveday, C, Allen, C L, Amor, D J, Ardissone, A, Banka, S, Bourgois, A, Coubes, C, Cytrynbaum, C, Faivre, L, Marion, G, Horton, R, Kotzot, D, Lay-Son, G, Lees, M, Low, K, Luk, H-M, Mark, P, McConkie-Rosell, A, McDonald, M, Pappas, J, Phillipe, C, Shears, D, Skotko, B, Stewart, F, Temple, I K, Mau-Them, F T, Verdugo, R A, Weksberg, R, Zarate, Y A, Graham, J M & Tatton-Brown, K 2019, ' HIST1H1E heterozygous protein-truncating variants cause a recognizable syndrome with intellectual disability and distinctive facial gestalt : A study to clarify the HIST1H1E syndrome phenotype in 30 individuals ', American Journal of Medical Genetics. Part A, vol. 179, no. 10, pp. 2049-2055 . https://doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.a.61321
- Publication Year :
- 2019
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 2019.
-
Abstract
- International audience; Histone Gene Cluster 1 Member E, HIST1H1E, encodes Histone H1.4, is one of a family of epigenetic regulator genes, acts as a linker histone protein, and is responsible for higher order chromatin structure. HIST1H1E syndrome (also known as Rahman syndrome, OMIM #617537) is a recently described intellectual disability (ID) syndrome. Since the initial description of five unrelated individuals with three different heterozygous protein-truncating variants (PTVs) in the HIST1H1E gene in 2017, we have recruited 30 patients, all with HIST1H1E PTVs that result in the same shift in frame and that cluster to a 94-base pair region in the HIST1H1E carboxy terminal domain. The identification of 30 patients with HIST1H1E variants has allowed the clarification of the HIST1H1E syndrome phenotype. Major findings include an ID and a recognizable facial appearance. ID was reported in all patients and is most frequently of moderate severity. The facial gestalt consists of a high frontal hairline and full lower cheeks in early childhood and, in later childhood and adulthood, affected individuals have a strikingly high frontal hairline, frontal bossing, and deep-set eyes. Other associated clinical features include hypothyroidism, abnormal dentition, behavioral issues, cryptorchidism, skeletal anomalies, and cardiac anomalies. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is frequently abnormal with a slender corpus callosum a frequent finding.
- Subjects :
- Heterozygote
Bioinformatics
Corpus callosum
Rahman syndrome
Histones
03 medical and health sciences
Frontal Bossing
0302 clinical medicine
HIST1H1E
Gene cluster
Intellectual disability
Genetics
Humans
Learning
Medicine
Epigenetics
Genetics (clinical)
030304 developmental biology
Behavior
[SDV.GEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics
0303 health sciences
epigenetic regulator gene
biology
business.industry
Facies
Heterozygote advantage
Syndrome
medicine.disease
Phenotype
Histone
[SDV.GEN.GH]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics/Human genetics
intellectual disability
Mutation
biology.protein
Growth and Development
business
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15524833 and 15524825
- Volume :
- 179
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....44aa7fc4767f166673682003bbd5ca23
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.a.61321