Department of Pediatrics, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Department of Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Am J Med Genet A. 2022 Jan;188(1):357-363. doi: 10.1002/ajmg.a.62520. Epub 2021 Oct 8.
D-bifunctional protein (DBP) deficiency is a rare, autosomal recessive peroxisomal enzyme deficiency resulting in a high burden of morbidity and early mortality. Patients with DBP deficiency resemble those with a severe Zellweger phenotype, with neonatal hypotonia, seizures, craniofacial dysmorphisms, psychomotor delay, deafness, blindness, and death typically within the first 2 years of life, although patients with residual enzyme function can survive longer. The clinical severity of the disease depends on the degree of enzyme deficiency. Loss-of-function variants typically result in no residual enzyme activity; however, splice variants may result in protein with residual function. We describe a full-term newborn presenting with hypotonia, seizures, and unexplained hypoglycemia, who was later found to have rickets at follow up. Rapid whole genome sequencing identified two HSD17B4 variants in trans; one likely pathogenic variant and one variant of uncertain significance (VUS) located in the polypyrimidine tract of intron 13. To determine the functional consequence of the VUS, we analyzed RNA from the patient's father with RNA-seq which showed skipping of Exon 14, resulting in a frameshift mutation three amino acids from the new reading frame. This RNA-seq analysis was correlated with virtually absent enzyme activity, elevated very-long-chain fatty acids in fibroblasts, and a clinically severe phenotype. Both variants are reclassified as pathogenic. Due to the clinical spectrum of DBP deficiency, this provides important prognostic information, including early mortality. Furthermore, we add persistent hypoglycemia to the clinical spectrum of the disease, and advocate for the early management of fat-soluble vitamin deficiencies to reduce complications.
D-双功能蛋白 (DBP) 缺乏症是一种罕见的常染色体隐性过氧化物酶缺乏症,导致发病率和早期死亡率高。DBP 缺乏症患者的表现类似于严重 Zellweger 表型,新生儿表现为低张力、癫痫发作、颅面畸形、精神运动发育迟缓、耳聋、失明,通常在生命的头 2 年内死亡,尽管具有残留酶功能的患者可以存活更长时间。疾病的临床严重程度取决于酶缺乏的程度。失活变异通常导致无残留酶活性;然而,剪接变异可能导致具有残留功能的蛋白质。我们描述了一名足月新生儿,表现为低张力、癫痫发作和不明原因的低血糖,随后在随访中发现佝偻病。全基因组快速测序发现了两个 HSD17B4 变异体,一个可能的致病性变异体和一个位于 13 号内含子多嘧啶 tract 的意义不明变异体(VUS)。为了确定 VUS 的功能后果,我们通过 RNA-seq 分析了患者父亲的 RNA,结果显示外显子 14 跳跃,导致新阅读框中三个氨基酸的移码突变。这种 RNA-seq 分析与几乎不存在的酶活性、成纤维细胞中非常长链脂肪酸的升高以及临床严重表型相关。这两个变异体均被重新归类为致病性。由于 DBP 缺乏症的临床谱,这提供了重要的预后信息,包括早期死亡率。此外,我们将持续性低血糖添加到疾病的临床谱中,并提倡早期管理脂溶性维生素缺乏症以减少并发症。