Abstract

RASopathies are a group of disorders caused by pathogenic variants in the genes encoding Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway and share overlapping clinical and molecular features. This study is aimed to describe the clinical and molecular features of 38 patients with RASopathies. Sanger or targeted next-generation sequencing of related genes and multiplex ligation-dependent-probe amplification analysis for NF1 were performed. The pathogenic variant detection rate was 94.4%. While PTPN11 was responsible for 50% of 18 patients with Noonan syndrome (NS), SOS1, LZTR1, RIT1, and RAF1 were responsible for the remaining 27.8%, 11.1%, 5.5%, and 5.5%, respectively. Three variants in LZTR1 were novel, of which two were identified in the compound heterozygous state in a patient with intellectual disability and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, whereas the third variant was found in the heterozygous state in a patient with pulmonary stenosis and normal intelligence. We described pyloric stenosis, knee dislocation, and cleft palate in patients with SOS1, RIT1, and RAF1 variants, respectively, that was not previously reported. We detected a PTPN11 variant in three patients from same family with NS with multiple lentigines. BRAF and MAP2K2 variants were found in eight patients with Cardiofaciocutaneous syndrome. Two variants in HRAS were detected in two Costello syndrome patients, one with a mild and the other with a severe phenotype. While large NF1 deletions were identified in four Neurofibromatosis-NS patients with intellectual disability, intelligence was normal in one patient with missense variant. In conclusion, this study provided three novel variants in LZTR1 and expanded the clinical phenotype of rare RASopathies.

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