A recessive variant in SIM2 in a child with complex craniofacial anomalies and global developmental delay. uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Rare deletions and duplications on the long arm of Chromosome 21 have previously been reported in many patients with craniofacial and developmental phenotypes. However, this Down Syndrome Critical Region (DSCR) contains multiple genes, making identifying a single causative gene difficult. Here, we report a case of a boy with bicoronal craniosynostosis, facial dysmorphism, developmental delay, and intellectual impairment who was found by whole genome sequencing to have a homozygous missense mutation in the Single-Minded Homolog 2 (SIM2) gene (c.461 A > G, p.Tyr154Cys) within the DSCR. SIM2 encodes an essential bHLH and PAS domain transcription factor expressed during fetal brain development and acts as a master regulator of neurogenesis. This variant is globally very rare, segregates in the family, and is predicted to be highly deleterious by in silico analysis, 3D molecular modeling of protein structure, and functional analysis of zebrafish models. Zebrafish expressing the human SIM2p.Y154C variant displayed a progressed microcephaly-like phenotype and head shape abnormalities. When combined with careful phenotyping of the patient vis-à-vis previously reported cases harboring structural variants in this critical 21q22 region, the data support a pathogenic role of SIM2 in this complex syndrome and demonstrates the utility of next-generation sequencing in prioritizing genes in contiguous deletions/duplications syndromes and diagnosing microarray-negative patients in the craniofacial clinic.

publication date

  • February 16, 2022

Research

keywords

  • Craniofacial Abnormalities
  • Down Syndrome
  • Intellectual Disability
  • Microcephaly

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85124757293

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.ejmg.2022.104455

PubMed ID

  • 35182808

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 65

issue

  • 4