Publication | Open Access
De novo loss-of-function variants in <i>NSD2</i> (<i>WHSC1</i>) associate with a subset of Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome
27
Citations
7
References
2019
Year
Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS) is a rare but recurrent microdeletion syndrome associated with hemizygosity of an interstitial segment of Chromosome 4 (4p16.3). Consistent with historical reports in which overlapping deletions defined a minimal critical region in WHS patients, recent reports from exome sequence analysis have provided further evidence that haploinsufficiency of a specific gene within this critical region, <i>NSD2</i> (<i>WHSC1</i>), is causal for many features of the syndrome. In this report, we describe three unrelated patients with loss-of-function alterations in <i>NSD2</i> who presented clinically with WHS features including intrauterine growth retardation and global developmental delay. Two of the three patients also had overlapping features of failure to thrive, short stature, constipation, and hypotonia. This series adds additional cases to expand the phenotypic spectrum of WHS and reports novel <i>NSD2</i> variants.
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