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A new case of <scp>Smith‐Kingsmore</scp> syndrome with somatic <scp>MTOR</scp> pathogenic variant expands the phenotypic spectrum to lateralized overgrowth
14
Citations
10
References
2021
Year
Smith-kingsmore SyndromeDevelopmental AnomalyDevelopmental BiologySixth CaseNew CaseGenetic DisorderMendelian DisorderGeneticsPathogenesisPathologyPhenotypic SpectrumMolecular GeneticsDisease Gene IdentificationMedicineTuberous SclerosisCell DevelopmentClinical GeneticsMtor Pathogenic Variants
Smith-Kingsmore syndrome (SKS) is a rare autosomal dominant disorder caused by heterozygous germline activating pathogenic variants in mammalian target of rapamycin (MTOR) on chromosome 1p36. A few patients with disseminated mosaicism have been described so far and they seem to display a different phenotype when compared to germline cases. Here we report the sixth case with a disseminated mosaic MTOR pathogenic variant, a 7-year-old boy with hemimegalencephaly, epilepsy, developmental delay, hypomelanosis of Ito, and lateralized overgrowth. Genetic testing revealed a pathogenic variant (c.4448G > A, p.Cys1483Tyr) in MTOR with a frequency of 32% in the DNA extracted from a skin sample, 3% in saliva and 0.46% in blood. The clinical features observed in our patient further corroborate the existence of differences in phenotypic presentation of germline and mosaic SKS cases. Moreover, lateralized overgrowth, a finding never described so far in SKS, further expands the phenotypic spectrum of SKS and allows the inclusion of MTOR pathogenic variants among the several causes of asymmetric body overgrowth.
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