Abstract

SOX10 variants previously implicated in Waardenburg syndrome (WS) have now been linked to Kallmann syndrome (KS), the anosmic form of idiopathic hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (IHH). We investigated whether SOX10-associated WS and IHH represent elements of a phenotypic continuum within a unifying disorder or if they represent phenotypically distinct allelic disorders.Exome sequencing from 1,309 IHH subjects (KS: 632; normosmic idiopathic hypogonadotropic hypogonadism [nIIHH]: 677) were reviewed for SOX10 rare sequence variants (RSVs). The genotypic and phenotypic spectrum of SOX10-related IHH (this study and literature) and SOX10-related WS cases (literature) were reviewed and compared with SOX10-RSV spectrum in gnomAD population.Thirty-seven SOX10-associated IHH cases were identified as follows: current study: 16 KS; 4 nIHH; literature: 16 KS; 1 nIHH. Twenty-three IHH cases (62%; all KS), had ≥1 known WS-associated feature(s). Moreover, five previously reported SOX10-associated WS cases showed IHH-related features. Four SOX10 missense RSVs showed allelic overlap between IHH-ascertained and WS-ascertained cases. The SOX10-HMG domain showed an enrichment of RSVs in disease states versus gnomAD.SOX10 variants contribute to both anosmic (KS) and normosmic (nIHH) forms of IHH. IHH and WS represent SOX10-associated developmental defects that lie along a unifying phenotypic continuum. The SOX10-HMG domain is critical for the pathogenesis of SOX10-related human disorders.

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