Early Infantile Thiamine Transporter-2 Deficiency with Epileptic Spasms—A Phenotypic Spectrum with a Novel Mutation

Author:

Mishra Ranjana1,Bijarnia-Mahay Sunita1,Kumar Praveen2,Buxi Tarvinder Bir Singh3,Kulshrestha Samarth1,Kuldeep Jitendra1,Gupta Deepti1,Saxena Renu1,Sabharwal Rama Kant2

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Medical Genetics and Genomics, Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, New Delhi, India

2. Department of Pediatric Neurology, Institute of Child Health, Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, New Delhi, India

3. Department of CT Scan and MRI, Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, New Delhi, India

Abstract

AbstractEpileptic seizures are a frequent feature of thiamine transporter deficiency that may present as a clinical continuum between severe epileptic encephalopathy and mixed focal or generalized seizures. Thiamine metabolism dysfunction syndrome 2 (MIM: 607483) or biotin-thiamine-responsive basal ganglia disease (BTBGD) due to biallelic pathogenic mutation in the SLC19A3 gene is a well-recognized cause of early infantile encephalopathy with a Leigh syndrome-like presentation and a lesser-known phenotype of atypical infantile spasms. We reported a 4-month-old infant who presented with progressive epileptic spasms since 1 month of age, psychomotor retardation, and lactic acidosis. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed altered signal intensities in bilateral thalamic and basal ganglia, cerebellum, brainstem, cortical and subcortical white matter. Whole exome sequencing identified a homozygous ENST00000258403.3: c.871G > C (p.Gly291Arg) variant in the SLC19A3 gene. We elucidate the features in the proband, which were an amalgamation of both the above subtypes of the SLC19A3 associated with early infantile encephalopathy. We also highlight the features which were atypical for either “Leigh syndrome-like” or “atypical infantile spasm” phenotypes and suggest that the two separate entities can be merged as a clinical continuum. Treatment outcome with high-dose biotin and thiamine is promising. In addition, we report a novel pathogenic variant in the SLC19A3 gene.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Clinical Neurology,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

Cited by 2 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Thiamine, transporters, and epilepsy;Vitamins and Minerals in Neurological Disorders;2023

2. In silico Structural and Functional Characterization of a Hypothetical Protein from Stenotrophomonas maltophilia SRM01;Journal of Pure and Applied Microbiology;2022-05-31

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