Abstract

Two siblings born to non-consanguineous parents showed nystagmus and sudden opistotonic posturing from the early infancy, and subsequent developmental delay and marked choreiform movements with hypotonia in the childhood. The brother had a mild postnatal microcephaly. Brain MRI of the sister showed mild delay of myelination, dilated anterior horn and mild cerebellar atrophy. Whole exome sequencing (WES) revealed compound heterozygous mutations in MED17 gene in both siblings: c.1013-5A>G and c.1484T>G mutations transmitted from their father and mother, respectively. The c.1013-5A>G mutation caused insertion of 4 bases of intron 6 in the transcript, resulting in frameshift (p. Ser338Asnfs*15), and mutant transcript underwent nonsense-mediated mRNA decay in lymphoblastoid cells derived from two siblings. The c.1484T>G mutation substituted a leucine residue, which is highly conserved among the vertebrates, and was predicted to be damaging by in silico analysis programs. Both mutations were not registered in dbSNP data and in our 575 control exomes. These results suggest that the siblings' mutations are likely to be pathogenic. This is the second case report concerning MED17 mutations. Compared with the first reported cases of Caucasian Jewish origin, the clinical symptoms and courses are much milder and slower, respectively, in our cases. Genotype difference (a homozygous mutation versus compound heterozygous mutations) might explain these clinical differences between two cases, though early-onset nystagmus and later choreiform movements were unique in our cases. Clinical spectrum and phenotype-genotype correlations in this rare mutation should be further elucidated.

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