Abstract

Mosaicism in Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) has been reported in clinically diagnosed CdLS patients with negative molecular testing using blood as the specimen, particularly in the NIPBL gene. Here we report a novel mosaic variant in SMC1A identified in the buccal swab DNA of a patient with a mild CdLS phenotype. Our patient presented with global developmental delay, dysmorphic features, microcephaly, and short stature, with no limb defect. Face2Gene, a digital tool that analyzes facial morphology, demonstrated a 97% match between our patient and the CdLS gestalt. An initial next-generation sequencing (NGS)-based CdLS panel test, including NIPBL, HDAC8, RAD21, SMC1A, and SMC3, completed using DNA isolated from leukocytes, was negative, and subsequent trio exome sequencing was nondiagnostic. The exome identified biallelic variants of uncertain significance in a candidate gene, NSMCE2. In the pursuit of a molecular diagnosis, a second NGS-based CdLS panel test was ordered on a buccal swab specimen and a novel variant, c.793_795delGAG (p.Glu265del) in SMC1A, was detected at 60% mosaicism. Retrospective analysis of the former panel and exome data revealed the SMC1A variant at 4% and 2%, respectively, both far below standard reporting thresholds. Given that mosaicism has been frequently reported in CdLS, we suggest selecting a different tissue for testing in clinically suspected CdLS cases, even after negative molecular results via blood specimen.

Highlights

  • We present a 6-yr-old male with global developmental delays, microcephaly, short stature improved by growth hormone, small penis for age, plus hyperlipidemia, and dysmorphic features reminiscent of Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS)

  • Somatic mosaicism has been frequently reported in the NIPBL gene. These NIPBL mosaic cases have generally correlated with a classic appearance and severe manifestations, suggesting that detected mosaicism does not necessarily ameliorate clinical features in this condition, especially for cases caused by variants in NIPBL (Castronovo et al 2010; Gervasini et al 2013)

  • To the best of our knowledge, our case is only the second reported CdLS-like patient with somatic mosaicism on SMC1A; this contrasts with high mosaicism on the NIPBL gene, which is well known

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Summary

Introduction

We present a 6-yr-old male with global developmental delays, microcephaly, short stature improved by growth hormone, small penis for age, plus hyperlipidemia, and dysmorphic features reminiscent of Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS). A CdLS next-generation sequencing (NGS)-based gene panel (sequencing and copy-number variant [CNV] analysis), including NIPBL, HDAC8, RAD21, SMC1A, and SMC3, was ordered on a blood specimen, and the result was negative, with no variants of interest reported.

Results
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