Division of Pediatric Respiratory Medicine, McGill University Health Centre Research Institute, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Division of Pulmonary Diseases and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Mol Genet Genomic Med. 2021 Jul;9(7):e1726. doi: 10.1002/mgg3.1726. Epub 2021 Jun 15.
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a mostly autosomal recessive, genetic disease of abnormal motile cilia function, resulting in bronchiectasis, infertility, organ laterality defects, and chronic otolaryngology disease. Though motile, ependymal cilia influencing cerebrospinal fluid flow in the central nervous system share many aspects of structure and function with motile cilia in the respiratory tract, hydrocephalus is rarely associated with PCD. Recently, pathogenic variants in FOXJ1 (Chr 17q25.1) were identified causing PCD associated with hydrocephalus, reduced respiratory cilia number, axonemal microtubule disorganization, and occurring in a de novo, autosomal dominant inheritance pattern.
Two patients with chronic oto-sino-pulmonary disease and hydrocephalus underwent candidate testing of FOXJ1. Coding region and splice junctions were sequenced and analyzed under the auspices of Genetic Disorders of Mucociliary Clearance Consortium.
Upon sequencing of the entire coding region and splice-junctions, heterozygous, pathogenic variants in FOXJ1 were discovered in exon 3 of two patients: an 11-month-old female with situs inversus totalis (NM_001454.4: c.945delC (p.Phe315Leufs18)) and a 51 year-old male, post-double lung transplantation (NM_001454.4: c.929_932delACTG (p.Asp310Glyfs22)). FOXJ1 variants were not detected in the available parents and the siblings of these probands.
FOXJ1 pathogenic variants cause PCD in a de novo, autosomal dominant inheritance pattern, and are associated with hydrocephalus. Physicians treating patients with hydrocephalus and chronic oto-sino-pulmonary disease should be aware of this PCD association and test for FOXJ1 variants.
原发性纤毛运动障碍(PCD)是一种常染色体隐性遗传的、运动纤毛功能异常的基因疾病,导致支气管扩张、不孕、器官侧位缺陷和慢性耳鼻喉疾病。虽然能动,但影响中枢神经系统脑脊液流动的室管膜纤毛在结构和功能上与呼吸道的运动纤毛有许多相似之处,但PCD 很少与脑积水有关。最近,在导致 PCD 并伴有脑积水、呼吸纤毛数量减少、轴丝微管紊乱的 FOXJ1 (Chr17q25.1)中发现了致病性变异,这些变异以从头发生、常染色体显性遗传的方式发生。
两名患有慢性耳-鼻-肺疾病和脑积水的患者接受了 FOXJ1 的候选检测。在遗传障碍纤毛清除联盟的支持下,对编码区和剪接接头进行了测序和分析。
对两名患者的 FOXJ1 整个编码区和剪接接头进行测序后,发现了 FOXJ1 中的杂合致病性变异:一名 11 个月大的女性患者存在全内脏反位(NM_001454.4:c.945delC(p.Phe315Leufs18)),一名 51 岁男性患者在双肺移植后(NM_001454.4:c.929_932delACTG(p.Asp310Glyfs22))。这些先证者的父母和兄弟姐妹均未检测到 FOXJ1 变异。
FOXJ1 致病性变异以从头发生、常染色体显性遗传的方式引起 PCD,并与脑积水相关。治疗患有脑积水和慢性耳-鼻-肺疾病的患者的医生应该意识到这种 PCD 相关性,并检测 FOXJ1 变异。