Abstract
Polynucleotide kinase phosphatase (PNKP), encoded by the PNKP gene, is a DNA processing enzyme involved in double-strand break and single-strand break repair pathways, which are essential for genome stability and for the correct development and maintenance of human nervous system. PNKP biallelic loss-of-function variants have been associated with a broad spectrum of neurological anomalies, ranging from congenital microcephaly with intellectual disability and seizures (MCSZ), to later onset forms of ataxia-oculomotor apraxia (AOA4) or peripheral neuropathy (CMT2B2). We report the atypical clinical manifestations of a patient with severe microcephaly, short stature, developmental delay, conductive hearing loss, and tracheoesophageal malformation, in the absence of seizures. Whole exome sequencing analysis identified two novel, compound heterozygous splice-site variants in the PNKP gene (NM_007254.4): c.1448+1G > A and c.199-8_199-5del. To demonstrate the effect of both variants on the splicing process and prove their pathogenicity, we performed a hybrid minigene assay, which successfully highlighted a deleterious impact on the transcript, particularly regarding the c.199-8_199-5del variant. The uncommon clinical features of the proband and the identification of two newly associated pathogenic variants add further evidence to the allelic and phenotypic heterogeneity of the PNKP locus.
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More From: American journal of medical genetics. Part B, Neuropsychiatric genetics : the official publication of the International Society of Psychiatric Genetics
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