SAMHD1 compound heterozygous rare variants associated with moyamoya and mitral valve disease in the absence of other features of Aicardi–Goutières syndrome

Author:

Karla Aamuktha R.1ORCID,Pinard Amélie1,Boerio Maura L.1,Hemelsoet Dimitri2,Tavernier Simon J.3,De Pauw Michel4,Vereecke Elke5,Fraser Stuart6,Bamshad Michael J.7,Guo Dongchuan1,Callewaert Bert89ORCID,Milewicz Dianna M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, McGovern Medical School University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston Houston Texas USA

2. Department of Neurology Ghent University Hospital Ghent Belgium

3. Department of Internal Medicine and Pediatrics, Center for Primary Immunodeficiency, Jeffrey Modell Diagnosis and Research Center Ghent University Hospital Ghent Belgium

4. Department of Cardiology Ghent University Hospital Ghent Belgium

5. Department of Radiology Ghent University Hospital Ghent Belgium

6. Division of Child Neurology, Department of Pediatrics, McGovern Medical School University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston Houston Texas USA

7. Division of Genetic Medicine, Department of Pediatrics University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

8. Center for Medical Genetics Ghent Ghent University Hospital Ghent Belgium

9. Department of Biomolecular Medicine Ghent University Ghent Belgium

Abstract

AbstractAicardi–Goutières syndrome (AGS) is an autosomal recessive inflammatory syndrome that manifests as an early‐onset encephalopathy with both neurologic and extraneurologic clinical findings. AGS has been associated with pathogenic variants in nine genes: TREX1, RNASEH2B, RNASEH2C, RNASEH2A, SAMHD1, ADAR, IFIH1, LSM11, and RNU71. Diagnosis is established by clinical findings (encephalopathy and acquired microcephaly, intellectual and physical impairments, dystonia, hepatosplenomegaly, sterile pyrexia, and/or chilblains), characteristic abnormalities on cranial CT (calcification of the basal ganglia and white matter) and MRI (leukodystrophic changes), or the identification of pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants in the known genes. One of the genes associated with AGS, SAMHD1, has also been associated with a spectrum of cerebrovascular diseases, including moyamoya disease (MMD). In this report, we describe a 31‐year‐old male referred to genetics for MMD since childhood who lacked the hallmark features of AGS patients but was found to have compound heterozygous SAMHD1 variants. He later developed mitral valve insufficiency due to recurrent chordal rupture and ultimately underwent a heart transplant at 37 years of age. Thus, these data suggest that SAMHD1 pathogenic variants can cause MMD without typical AGS symptoms and support that SAMHD1 should be assessed in MMD patients even in the absence of AGS features.

Funder

American Heart Association

Henrietta B. and Frederick H. Bugher Foundation

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

National Human Genome Research Institute

National Institutes of Health

Texas Heart Institute

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

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