Sanmei Wang, Di Cui, Xiuxin Ling, Yu Hou, Jing Sun
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Two novel variants of the STXBP1 and CHRNB2 genes identified in a Chinese boy with refractory seizures and developmental delay.
Autosomal dominant sleep-related hypermotor epilepsy is a rare disease caused by pathogenic variants of CHRNB2, CHRNA4, and CHRNA2 genes, with nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy as the main symptoms. Syntaxin binding protein 1 (STXBP1) gene mutation can cause developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 4, mainly presenting as a developmental and epileptic encephalopathy. We performed the exome-targeted next-generation sequencing in our patient and identified two heterozygous variants: c.963 + 2T>C of STXBP1 and c.520_527delinsTGCTAC (p.R174Cfs*16) of CHRNB2. Molecular analysis was performed of the variant c.963 + 2T>C. Aberrantly spliced products were observed, proving the pathogenicity of this variant. Refractory seizures and developmental delay could be explained. Although the variant c.520_527delinsTGCTAC could cause the truncation of the proteins, it was ultimately determined to be nonpathogenic. The startle-like responses that occurred occasionally during the night were ultimately determined to be an uncommon phenotype caused by the STXBP1 variant.
期刊介绍:
The journal aims to publish papers which bring together clinical observations, psychological and behavioural abnormalities and genetic data. All papers are fully refereed.
Psychiatric Genetics is also a forum for reporting new approaches to genetic research in psychiatry and neurology utilizing novel techniques or methodologies. Psychiatric Genetics publishes original Research Reports dealing with inherited factors involved in psychiatric and neurological disorders. This encompasses gene localization and chromosome markers, changes in neuronal gene expression related to psychiatric disease, linkage genetics analyses, family, twin and adoption studies, and genetically based animal models of neuropsychiatric disease. The journal covers areas such as molecular neurobiology and molecular genetics relevant to mental illness.
Reviews of the literature and Commentaries in areas of current interest will be considered for publication. Reviews and Commentaries in areas outside psychiatric genetics, but of interest and importance to Psychiatric Genetics, will also be considered.
Psychiatric Genetics also publishes Book Reviews, Brief Reports and Conference Reports.