PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

New genes involved in Angelman syndrome-like: Expanding the genetic spectrum.

  • Cinthia Aguilera,
  • Elisabeth Gabau,
  • Ariadna Ramirez-Mallafré,
  • Carme Brun-Gasca,
  • Jana Dominguez-Carral,
  • Veronica Delgadillo,
  • Steve Laurie,
  • Sophia Derdak,
  • Natàlia Padilla,
  • Xavier de la Cruz,
  • Núria Capdevila,
  • Nino Spataro,
  • Neus Baena,
  • Miriam Guitart,
  • Anna Ruiz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0258766
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 10
p. e0258766

Abstract

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Angelman syndrome (AS) is a neurogenetic disorder characterized by severe developmental delay with absence of speech, happy disposition, frequent laughter, hyperactivity, stereotypies, ataxia and seizures with specific EEG abnormalities. There is a 10-15% of patients with an AS phenotype whose genetic cause remains unknown (Angelman-like syndrome, AS-like). Whole-exome sequencing (WES) was performed on a cohort of 14 patients with clinical features of AS and no molecular diagnosis. As a result, we identified 10 de novo and 1 X-linked pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants in 10 neurodevelopmental genes (SYNGAP1, VAMP2, TBL1XR1, ASXL3, SATB2, SMARCE1, SPTAN1, KCNQ3, SLC6A1 and LAS1L) and one deleterious de novo variant in a candidate gene (HSF2). Our results highlight the wide genetic heterogeneity in AS-like patients and expands the differential diagnosis.