Abstract

Schaaf-Yang syndrome (SYS) is a recently identified rare neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by neonatal hypotonia, feeding difficulty, joint contractures, autism spectrum disorder and development delay/intellectual disability. It is mainly caused by truncating variants in maternally imprinted gene MAGEL2 within the Prader-Willi syndrome critical region 15q11-q13. Clinical diagnosis of SYS is difficult for clinicians due to its rarity and highly variable phenotypes, while unique inheritance patterns also complicate genetic diagnosis. To date, no published papers have analyzed the clinical consequences and molecular changes in Chinese patients. In this study, we retrospectively investigated the mutation spectrums and phenotypic features of 12 SYS infants. The data were from a cohort of critically ill infants from the China neonatal genomes project (CNGP), sponsored by Children's Hospital of Fudan University. We also reviewed relevant literature. Six previously reported mutations and six novel pathogenic variations of MAGEL2 were identified in 12 unrelated infants. Neonatal respiratory problems were the major complaint for hospitalization, which occurred in 91.7% (11/12) cases. All babies displayed feeding difficulties and a poor suck postnatally, and neonatal dystonia was present in 11 of the cases; joint contractures and multiple congenital defects were also observed. Interestingly, we found that 42.5% (57/134) of the reported SYS patients, including ours carried variants in the c.1996 site, particularly the c.1996dupC variant. The mortality rate was 17.2% (23/134), with the median age of death between 24 gestational weeks in fetuses and 1-month-old in infants. Respiratory failure was the leading cause of death in live-born patients (58.8%, 10/17), especially during the neonatal period. Our findings expanded the genotype and phenotype spectrum of neonatal SYS patients. The results demonstrated that respiratory dysfunction was a typical characteristic among Chinese SYS neonates that should attract physicians' attention. The early identification of such disorders allows early intervention and can further provide genetic counseling as well as reproductive options for the affected families.

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