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The Diagnostic Journey of a Patient with Prader–Willi-Like Syndrome and a Unique Homozygous SNURF-SNRPN Variant

Authors :
Pellikaan, Karlijn
Woerden, Geeske M. van
Kleinendorst, Lotte
Rosenberg, Anna G. W.
Horsthemke, Bernhard
Grosser, Christian
Zutven, Laura J. C. M. van
Rossum, Elisabeth F. C. van
Lely, Aart J. van der
Resnick, James L.
Brüggenwirth, Hennie T.
Haelst, Mieke M. van
Graaff, Laura C. G. de
Source :
Genes, Volume 12, Issue 6
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2021.

Abstract

Prader–Willi syndrome (PWS) is a rare genetic condition characterized by hypotonia, intellectual disability, and hypothalamic dysfunction, causing pituitary hormone deficiencies and hyperphagia, ultimately leading to obesity. PWS is most often caused by the loss of expression of a cluster of genes on chromosome 15q11.2-13. Patients with Prader–Willi-like syndrome (PWLS) display features of the PWS phenotype without a classical PWS genetic defect. We describe a 46-year-old patient with PWLS, including hypotonia, intellectual disability, hyperphagia, and pituitary hormone deficiencies. Routine genetic tests for PWS were normal, but a homozygous missense variant NM_003097.3(SNRPN):c.193C&gt<br />T, p.(Arg65Trp) was identified. Single nucleotide polymorphism array showed several large regions of homozygosity, caused by high-grade consanguinity between the parents. Our functional analysis, the ‘Pipeline for Rapid in silico, in vivo, in vitro Screening of Mutations’ (PRiSM) screen, showed that overexpression of SNRPN-p.Arg65Trp had a dominant negative effect, strongly suggesting pathogenicity. However, it could not be confirmed that the variant was responsible for the phenotype of the patient. In conclusion, we present a unique homozygous missense variant in SNURF-SNRPN in a patient with PWLS. We describe the diagnostic trajectory of this patient and the possible contributors to her phenotype in light of the current literature on the genotype–phenotype relationship in PWS.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20734425
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genes
Accession number :
edsair.multidiscipl..03cf6704aadd865536820419d81bb35f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/genes12060875