Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two sisters (ages 16 yr and 15 yr) have been followed by our clinical genetics team for several years. Both girls have severe intellectual disability, hypotonia, seizures, and distinctive craniofacial features. The parents are healthy and have no other children. Oligo array, fragile X testing, and numerous single-gene tests were negative. All four family members underwent research exome sequencing, which revealed a heterozygous nonsense mutation in ASXL3 (p.R1036X) that segregated with disease. Exome data and independent Sanger sequencing confirmed that the variant is de novo, suggesting possible germline mosaicism in one parent. The p.R1036X variant has never been observed in healthy human populations and has been previously reported as a pathogenic mutation. Truncating de novo mutations in ASXL3 cause Bainbridge-Ropers syndrome (BRPS), a developmental disorder with similarities to Bohring-Opitz syndrome. Fewer than 30 BRPS patients have been described in the literature; to our knowledge, this is the first report of the disorder in two related individuals. Our findings lend further support to intellectual disability, absent speech, autistic traits, hypotonia, and distinctive facial appearance as common emerging features of Bainbridge-Ropers syndrome.
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PMID:A de novo nonsense mutation in ASXL3 shared by siblings with Bainbridge-Ropers syndrome. 2930 46

Bainbridge-Ropers syndrome is a genetic syndrome caused by heterozygous loss-of-function pathogenic variants in ASXL3, which encodes a protein involved in transcriptional regulation. Affected individuals have multiple abnormalities including developmental impairment, hypotonia and characteristic facial features. Seizures are reported in approximately a third of cases; however, the epileptology has not been thoroughly studied. We identified three patients with pathogenic ASXL3 variants and seizures at Austin Health and in the DECIPHER database. These three patients had novel de novo ASXL3 pathogenic variants, two with truncation variants and one with a splice site variant. All three had childhood-onset generalized epilepsy with generalized tonic-clonic seizures, with one also having atypical absence seizures. We also reviewed available clinical data on five published patients with Bainbridge-Ropers syndrome and seizures. Of the five previously published patients, three also had generalized tonic-clonic seizures, one of whom also had possible absence seizures; a fourth patient had absence seizures and possible focal seizures. EEG typically showed features consistent with generalized epilepsy including generalized spike-wave, photoparoxysmal response, and occipital intermittent rhythmic epileptiform activity. Bainbridge-Ropers syndrome is associated with childhood-onset generalized epilepsy with generalized tonic-clonic seizures and/or atypical absence seizures.
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PMID:Childhood-onset generalized epilepsy in Bainbridge-Ropers syndrome. 3010 20