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Endocrine and behavioural features of Lowe syndrome and their potential molecular mechanisms

Authors :
Cecilia Sena
Grazia Iannello
Alicja A Skowronski
Katelyn Dannheim
Leonard Cheung
Pankaj B Agrawal
Joel N Hirschhorn
Phillip Zeitler
Charles A LeDuc
George Stratigopoulos
Vidhu V Thaker
Source :
Journal of medical genetics. 59(12)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

BackgroundLowe syndrome (LS) is an X linked disease caused by pathogenic variants in theOCRLgene that impacts approximately 1 in 500 000 children. Classic features include congenital cataract, cognitive/behavioural impairment and renal tubulopathy.MethodsThis study is a retrospective review of clinical features reported by family based survey conducted by Lowe Syndrome Association. Frequency of non-ocular clinical feature(s) of LS and their age of onset was summarised. An LS-specific therapy effectiveness scale was used to assess the response to the administered treatment. Expression ofOCRLand relevant neuropeptides was measured in postmortem human brain by qPCR. Gene expression in the mouse brain was determined by reanalysis of publicly available bulk and single cell RNA sequencing.ResultsA total of 137 individuals (1 female, 89.1% white, median age 14 years (range 0.8–56)) were included in the study. Short stature (height OCRLis expressed in human and mouse hypothalami, and in hypothalamic cell clusters expressingGhrh,Sst,Oxt,Pomcand pituitary cells expressingGhandPrl.ConclusionsThere is a wide spectrum of the clinical phenotype of LS. Some of the features may be partly driven by the loss of function ofOCRLin the hypothalamus and the pituitary.

Details

ISSN :
14686244
Volume :
59
Issue :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of medical genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8a627aa90c0add6fc62fac2c64ab48a5