[HTML][HTML] FBXL4-Related Mitochondrial DNA Depletion Syndrome 13 (MTDPS13): A Case Report With a Comprehensive Mutation Review

RA Ballout, C Al Alam, PE Bonnen, M Huemer… - Frontiers in …, 2019 - frontiersin.org
RA Ballout, C Al Alam, PE Bonnen, M Huemer, AW El-Hattab, R Shbarou
Frontiers in Genetics, 2019frontiersin.org
Mitochondrial DNA depletion syndromes (MTDPS) are a group of rare genetic disorders
caused by defects in multiple genes involved in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) maintenance.
Among those, FBXL4 mutations result in the encephalomyopathic mtDNA depletion
syndrome 13 (MTDPS13; OMIM# 615471), which commonly presents as a combination of
failure to thrive, neurodevelopmental delays, encephalopathy, hypotonia, and persistent
lactic acidosis. We report here the case of a Lebanese infant presenting to us with profound …
Mitochondrial DNA depletion syndromes (MTDPS) are a group of rare genetic disorders caused by defects in multiple genes involved in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) maintenance. Among those, FBXL4 mutations result in the encephalomyopathic mtDNA depletion syndrome 13 (MTDPS13; OMIM #615471), which commonly presents as a combination of failure to thrive, neurodevelopmental delays, encephalopathy, hypotonia, and persistent lactic acidosis. We report here the case of a Lebanese infant presenting to us with profound neurodevelopmental delays, generalized hypotonia, facial dysmorphic features, and extreme emaciation. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) showed the girl as having MTDPS13 with an underlying FBXL4 missense mutation that has been previously reported only twice in unrelated individuals (c.1303C > T). Comprehensive literature search marked our patient as being the 94th case of MTDPS13 reported to date worldwide, and the first from Lebanon. We include at the end of this report a comprehensive mutation review table of all the pathological FBXL4 mutations reported in the literature, using it to highlight, for the first time, a possible founder effect of Arab origins to the disorder, being most prevalent in patients of Arab descent as shown in our mutation table. Finally, we provide a direct comparison of the disorder's clinical manifestations across two unrelated patients harboring the same disease-causing mutation as our patient, emphasizing the remarkable variability in genotype-to-phenotype correlation characteristic of the disease.
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