4.2 Article

The first adolescent case of Fraser syndrome 3, with a novel nonsense variant in GRIP1

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS PART A
Volume 185, Issue 6, Pages 1858-1863

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.a.62163

Keywords

anophthalmia; hair growth on temples; microtia; midface retrusion; renal agenesis; syndactyly

Funding

  1. Istanbul Technical University [2021-42537]
  2. URF-QAU, Pakistan [2018-2019]

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This study reports a 15.5-year-old Pakistani boy with Fraser syndrome 3, who presents with various characteristic symptoms but no symptoms in other organs. This case expands the phenotypic and mutational spectrum of GRIP1, showing that a homozygous GRIP1 truncating variant can manifest with a less severe phenotype.
Fraser syndrome is characterized by cryptophthalmos, syndactyly and other autopod defects, and abnormalities of the respiratory and urogenital tracts. Biallelic variants in GRIP1 can cause Fraser syndrome 3 (FRASRS3), and five unrelated FRASRS3 cases have been reported to date. Four cases are fetuses with homozygous truncating variants. The remaining case is an almost 9-year-old Turkish girl compound heterozygous for a truncation variant and a possibly frame-shift intragenic deletion. We present a 15.5-year old Pakistani boy with homozygous truncating variant c.1774C>T (p.Gln592Ter). Of the hallmarks of the disease, the boy has cryptophthalmia, midface retrusion, very low anterior hairline, hair growth on temples extending to the supraorbital line and also on alae nasi, agenesis of right kidney, and cutaneous syndactyly of fingers and toes but no symptoms in any other organs, including lungs, anorectal system, genitalia, and umbilical system. This case is the oldest known individual with FRASRS3, and our findings show that a homozygous GRIP1 truncating variant can manifest with a non-lethal phenotype than in the reported cases with such variants, expanding the phenotypic and mutational spectrum of GRIP1.

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