Clinical heterogeneity of polish patients with KAT6B–related disorder

Author:

Magdalena Klaniewska1ORCID,Anna Bolanowska‐Tyszko2,Anna Latos‐Bielenska3,Aleksandra Jezela‐Stanek4,Krzysztof Szczaluba5,Malgorzata Krajewska‐Walasek467,Elzbieta Ciara6,Magdalena Pelc6,Dorota Jurkiewicz6,Piotr Stawinski5,Agnieszka Zubkiewicz‐Kucharska8,Małgorzata Rydzanicz5,Rafal Ploski5ORCID,Robert Smigiel8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Family and Pediatric Nursing Medical University of Wroclaw Wroclaw Poland

2. Department of Radiology Medical University of Wroclaw Wroclaw Poland

3. Department of Genetics Medical University Poznan Poland

4. Department of Genetics and Clinical Immunology National Institute of Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases Warsaw Poland

5. Department of Medical Genetics Warsaw Medical University Warsaw Poland

6. Department of Medical Genetics Children's Memorial Health Institute Warsaw Poland

7. Clinical Research Centre Medical University of Bialystok Poland

8. Department of Pediatrics, Endocrinology, Diabetology and Metabolic Diseases Medical University of Wroclaw Wroclaw Poland

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundSay‐Barber‐Biesecker‐Young‐Simpson (SBBYSS) variant of Ohdo syndrome is a rare, autosomal dominant and clinically heterogenous disorder, caused by pathogenic variants in the KAT6B gene located on chromosome 10q22.2. KAT6B encodes a highly conserved histone acetyltransferase belonging to the MYST family. Currently, diseases caused by pathogenic variants in KAT6B (KAT6B‐related disorders) comprise two allelic entities: SBBYSS variant of Ohdo syndrome and genitopatellar syndrome (GPS). Increase in the number of cases with overlapping GPS/SBBYSS phenotype which makes it necessary to redefine this group of phenotypes as KAT6B‐related disorders or KAT6B spectrum disorders.Individuals with SBBYSS usually present with facial abnormalities, hypotonia, joint laxity, feeding problems, and long thumbs/great toes. This syndrome also typically involves skeletal problems including patellar hypoplasia/agenesis.MethodsHere we report six SBBYS syndrome patients with the same dysmorphic features but a different course of the disease. One known and five novel KATB6 pathogenic variants were identified by molecular diagnostics using Next Generation Sequencing (NGS).ResultsWe present a detailed phenotypic analysis of six individuals with KAT6B‐related disorders, in whom a heterozygous pathogenic variant in KAT6B gene was found. In all of our patients facial dysmorphism as well as developmental and speech delay were present. Additionally, all but one patients presented with hypotonia, ocular abnormalities and long thumbs. Most of our probands showed blepharophimosis and skeletal (mainly knee) defects. Contrary to previously reported severe patellar defects (hypoplasia/agenesis) anomalies presented by our patients were less severe (dysplasia, habitual dislocation, subluxation) referring to KAT6B‐related disorders.ConclusionWhile most of the anomalies found in our patients comply with SBBYSS criteria, phenotypic differences in our probands support a broader spectrum of the disease phenotype. To establish the range of this spectrum, a detailed analysis of clinical variability among patients with SBBYSS requires further investigation.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology

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