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Analysis of clinical phenotype and genotype of Jansen-de Vries syndrome caused by PPM1D gene mutation / 中华神经科杂志
Chinese Journal of Neurology ; (12): 1140-1147, 2021.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-911848
ABSTRACT

Objective:

To investigate the clinical phenotype of a child with Jansen-de Vries syndrome, to clarify its genetic diagnosis and genetic characteristics, and to improve the understanding of this disease.

Methods:

Clinical data from a child with Jansen-de Vries syndrome diagnosed in the Children′s Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University in October 2019 were collected, using core family-complete exon genomics detection (Trio-WES) and chromosome copy number variation (CNV) analysis techniques for genetic testing for the child and her parents, generation Sanger sequencing for family member verification for possible pathogenic mutations, and clinical and molecular genetic analysis. The relevant reports of PPM1D gene mutation in patients with mental retardation were reviewed.

Results:

The proband was a 11-month-old girl, presenting with mental retardation, lagging speech and motor development, autistic behavior, gastrointestinal dysfunction, and short stature, low flat nose bridge, low ear, short finger syndrome.Trio-WES results of the core family of the child suggested that PPM1D was a new transcoding heterozygous mutation, PPM1D (NM-003620) c.1216delA (p.Thr406Profs *3), and the karyotype and CNV analysis of the chromosome were normal. Literature retrieval showed currently a total of 18 cases were reported PPM1D gene mutation of mental disorders, described in the online human Mendel database for developmental disorder associated with gastrointestinal dysfunction and pain threshold increases, the age distribution in the seven months to 21 years of age, clinical manifestation of mental retardation, increased pain threshold, abnormal behavior, feeding difficulties, visual impairment, short finger syndrome, a group of syndromes associated with short stature, fever or vomiting, and congenital deformities.

Conclusions:

Jansen-de Vries syndrome clinically presents mainly with overall retardation (mental retardation/backward delayed motor development, language development, low muscle tone), abnormal behavior (lonely sample behavior, autism), craniofacial malformations (broad forehead, low ear nose bridge, thin upper lip), short finger syndrome (short feet, pinky stubby), gastrointestinal dysfunction (milk overflow, feeding difficulties, constipation). The child was diagnosed as a newly transcoding heterozygous mutation of the PPM1D gene. The current treatment is mainly rehabilitation training, and growth hormone replacement therapy can be given to part of the short height disease. The PPM1D gene [PPM1D(NM-003620) c.1216delA(p.Thr406Profs *3)] is the genetic cause of the child.

Full text: Available Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Language: Chinese Journal: Chinese Journal of Neurology Year: 2021 Type: Article

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Full text: Available Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Language: Chinese Journal: Chinese Journal of Neurology Year: 2021 Type: Article