Abstract

BackgroundD-bifunctional protein deficiency, caused by recessive mutations in HSD17B4, is a severe, infantile-onset disorder of peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation. Few affected patients survive past two years of age. Compound heterozygous mutations in HSD17B4 have also been reported in two sisters diagnosed with Perrault syndrome (MIM # 233400), who presented in adolescence with ovarian dysgenesis, hearing loss, and ataxia.Case presentationAn adult male presented with cerebellar ataxia, peripheral neuropathy, hearing loss, and azoospermia. The clinical presentation, in combination with biochemical findings in serum, urine, and muscle biopsy, suggested a mitochondrial disorder. Commercial genetic testing of 18 ataxia and mitochondrial disease genes was negative. Targeted exome sequencing followed by analysis of single nucleotide variants and small insertions/deletions failed to reveal a genetic basis of disease. Application of a computational algorithm to infer copy number variants (CNVs) from exome data revealed a heterozygous 12 kb deletion of exons 10–13 of HSD17B4 that was compounded with a rare missense variant (p.A196V) at a highly conserved residue. Retrospective review of patient records revealed mildly elevated ratios of pristanic:phytanic acid and arachidonic:docosahexaenoic acid, consistent with dysfunctional peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation.ConclusionOur case expands the phenotypic spectrum of HSD17B4-deficiency, representing the first male case reported with infertility. Furthermore, it points to crosstalk between mitochondria and peroxisomes in HSD17B4-deficiency and Perrault syndrome.

Highlights

  • D-bifunctional protein deficiency, caused by recessive mutations in HSD17B4, is a severe, infantile-onset disorder of peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation

  • Our case expands the phenotypic spectrum of HSD17B4-deficiency, representing the first male case reported with infertility

  • It points to crosstalk between mitochondria and peroxisomes in HSD17B4-deficiency and Perrault syndrome

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Summary

Introduction

D-bifunctional protein deficiency, caused by recessive mutations in HSD17B4, is a severe, infantile-onset disorder of peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation. Patients with mitochondrial disorders can present with cerebellar ataxia, often in combination with other neurological and non-neurological symptoms [1]. Such disorders can be caused by mutations in the mitochondrial DNA or by recessive, dominant, or X-linked mutations. Case presentation A 35-year-old man presented for evaluation of a gait disorder progressing since childhood, cognitive impairment, and sensorineural hearing loss. Review of medical charts revealed documented azoospermia He was the product of neurologically healthy, non-consanguineous parents, with one healthy, fertile sister

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