BMC Pediatrics (May 2024)

Novel SETBP1 D874V adjacent to the degron causes canonical schinzel–giedion syndrome: a case report and review of the literature

  • Jing Zheng,
  • Meiqun Gu,
  • Shasha Xiao,
  • Chongzhen Li,
  • Hongying Mi,
  • Xiaoyan Xu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12887-024-04779-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Schinzel-Giedion syndrome (SGS) is a severe multisystem disorder characterized by distinctive facial features, profound intellectual disability, refractory epilepsy, cortical visual impairment, hearing loss, and various congenital anomalies. SGS is attributed to gain-of-function (GoF) variants in the SETBP1 gene, with reported variants causing canonical SGS located within a 12 bp hotspot region encoding SETBP1 residues aa868-871 (degron). Here, we describe a case of typical SGS caused by a novel heterozygous missense variant, D874V, adjacent to the degron. The female patient was diagnosed in the neonatal period and presented with characteristic facial phenotype (midface retraction, prominent forehead, and low-set ears), bilateral symmetrical talipes equinovarus, overlapping toes, and severe bilateral hydronephrosis accompanied by congenital heart disease, consistent with canonical SGS. This is the first report of a typical SGS caused by a, SETBP1 non-degron missense variant. This case expands the genetic spectrum of SGS and provides new insights into genotype-phenotype correlations.

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