International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jan 2022)

De Novo <i>ACTG1</i> Variant Expands the Phenotype and Genotype of Partial Deafness and Baraitser–Winter Syndrome

  • Mateusz Dawidziuk,
  • Anna Kutkowska-Kazmierczak,
  • Ewelina Bukowska-Olech,
  • Marta Jurek,
  • Ewa Kalka,
  • Dorothy Lys Guilbride,
  • Mariusz Ireneusz Furmanek,
  • Monika Bekiesinska-Figatowska,
  • Jerzy Bal,
  • Pawel Gawlinski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23020692
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 2
p. 692

Abstract

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Actin molecules are fundamental for embryonic structural and functional differentiation; γ-actin is specifically required for the maintenance and function of cytoskeletal structures in the ear, resulting in hearing. Baraitser–Winter Syndrome (B-WS, OMIM #243310, #614583) is a rare, multiple-anomaly genetic disorder caused by mutations in either cytoplasmically expressed actin gene, ACTB (β-actin) or ACTG1 (γ-actin). The resulting actinopathies cause characteristic cerebrofrontofacial and developmental traits, including progressive sensorineural deafness. Both ACTG1-related non-syndromic A20/A26 deafness and B-WS diagnoses are characterized by hypervariable penetrance in phenotype. Here, we identify a 28th patient worldwide carrying a mutated γ-actin ACTG1 allele, with mildly manifested cerebrofrontofacial B-WS traits, hypervariable penetrance of developmental traits and sensorineural hearing loss. This patient also displays brachycephaly and a complete absence of speech faculty, previously unreported for ACTG1-related B-WS or DFNA20/26 deafness, representing phenotypic expansion. The patient’s exome sequence analyses (ES) confirms a de novo ACTG1 variant previously unlinked to the pathology. Additional microarray analysis uncover no further mutational basis for dual molecular diagnosis in our patient. We conclude that γ-actin c.542C > T, p.Ala181Val is a dominant pathogenic variant, associated with mildly manifested facial and cerebral traits typical of B-WS, hypervariable penetrance of developmental traits and sensorineural deafness. We further posit and present argument and evidence suggesting ACTG1-related non-syndromic DFNA20/A26 deafness is a manifestation of undiagnosed ACTG1-related B-WS.

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