4 research outputs found

    Loss-of-function and missense variants in NSD2 cause decreased methylation activity and are associated with a distinct developmental phenotype

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    PURPOSE: Despite a few recent reports of patients harboring truncating variants in NSD2, a gene considered critical for the Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS) phenotype, the clinical spectrum associated with NSD2 pathogenic variants remains poorly understood. METHODS: We collected a comprehensive series of 18 unpublished patients carrying heterozygous missense, elongating, or truncating NSD2 variants; compared their clinical data to the typical WHS phenotype after pooling them with ten previously described patients; and assessed the underlying molecular mechanism by structural modeling and measuring methylation activity in vitro. RESULTS: The core NSD2-associated phenotype includes mostly mild developmental delay, prenatal-onset growth retardation, low body mass index, and characteristic facial features distinct from WHS. Patients carrying missense variants were significantly taller and had more frequent behavioral/psychological issues compared with those harboring truncating variants. Structural in silico modeling suggested interference with NSD2’s folding and function for all missense variants in known structures. In vitro testing showed reduced methylation activity and failure to reconstitute H3K36me2 in NSD2 knockout cells for most missense variants. CONCLUSION: NSD2 loss-of-function variants lead to a distinct, rather mild phenotype partially overlapping with WHS. To avoid confusion for patients, NSD2 deficiency may be named Rauch–Steindl syndrome after the delineators of this phenotype

    Neonatal citrullinemia: comparison of conventional MR, diffusion-weighted, and diffusion tensor findings

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    Conventional MR, diffusion-weighted, and diffusion tensor imaging were performed in an 8-day-old girl with citrullinemia. She had severe hyperammonemia for several days. On conventional T2-weighted MR images, symmetric, confluent high signal intensity was found in the bilateral thalami, basal ganglia, cortex, and subcortical white matter. Diffusion-weighted imaging demonstrated decreased apparent diffusion coefficient in these areas, reflecting cytotoxic edema. Follow-up MR imaging at the age of 4 months revealed subcortical cysts, ulegyric changes, and atrophy, which were most prominent in the occipital lobes. Diffusion tensor imaging revealed decreased anisotropy throughout the brain, consistent with diffuse injury to the oligodendro-axonal unit. Diffusion-weighted and diffusion tensor imaging are valuable techniques for the detection of irreversible brain damage and for the characterization of hyperintense lesions on T2-weighted MR images in patients with the neonatal form of citrullinemi
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