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Intellectual disability - microarray and sequencing v3.185 DNM1L Arina Puzriakova changed review comment from: Associated with related phenotype in OMIM and 'probable' gene in G2P. Variants in DNM1L cause a chronic neurological disorder, which is commonly associated with neonatal lethality. Global developmental delay or cognitive impairment (mild-profound) is reported in several surviving patients: PMID: 26931468 - Two unrelated cases: A male with global developmental delay, hypotonia and status epilepticus. WES revealed a c.1048G>A, p.G350R variant, for which low-level (68%) mosaicism was detected in the maternal sample.; to: Associated with related phenotype in OMIM and 'probable' gene in G2P.

Variants in DNM1L cause a chronic neurological disorder, which is commonly associated with neonatal lethality. Global developmental delay or cognitive impairment (mild-profound) is reported in several surviving patients:

PMID: 26931468 - Two unrelated cases: A male with global developmental delay, hypotonia and status epilepticus. WES revealed a c.1048G>A, p.G350R variant, for which low-level (6–8%) mosaicism was detected in the maternal sample. The second patient, with diffuse hypotonia, global developmental delay, poor growth, and persistent elevation of lactate, was found to harbour a de novo DNM1L variant (c.1135G>A, p.E379K). However, another de novo change in the PDHA1 gene (c.448G>A, p.G150R) was also found, and the definitive contribution of each variant to the patients phenotype could not be ascertained.

PMID: 27328748 - Compound heterozygous DNM1L variants (c.106A>G, p.Ser36Gly; c.346_347delGA, p.Glu116Lysfs*6) identified in two brothers (3 and 16-years-old) with psychomotor delay, ocular and cerebellar involvement, including mild cognitive impairment in the older brother. Some supporting functional evidence using patient fibroblasts and a yeast model.

PMID: 27301544 - De novo missense variant (c.1217T>C, p.Leu406Ser) identified in a child who presented severe hypotonia, infantile spasms with suppression‐burst and a high level of lactate in CSF. Development was profoundly delayed, and he attained no developmental milestones before his death at 18 months of age.

PMID: 26604000 - De novo missense substitution, (c.1085G>A; p.Gly362Asp) identified in a child with refractory epilepsy. Profound global developmental delay was reported, and at the last clinical assessment (age 7 years), he remained nonambulatory with the use of <10 monosyllabic words.

PMID: 26992161 - De novo heterozygous c.1084G>A (p.Gly362Ser) variant. Developmental delay was reported from 6-months of age, and at 2-years-old he was said to not be able to utter any intelligible words.

There are also reports of an identical de novo heterozygous missense variant (p.R403C) in four unrelated individuals who all experienced normal development until a sudden-onset episode of status epilepticus at the age of 4, 5, 10, and 11-years-old, respectively. Subsequently, all presented with rapid neurological regression, diffuse cerebral atrophy and substantial cognitive decline. Functional studies showed the variant confers a dominant negative effect (PMID: 27145208; 30767894; 30711678).
Intellectual disability - microarray and sequencing PDHA1 BRIDGE consortium edited their review of PDHA1
Intellectual disability - microarray and sequencing PDHA1 BRIDGE consortium edited their review of PDHA1
Intellectual disability - microarray and sequencing PDHA1 BRIDGE consortium reviewed PDHA1