4.6 Article

Compound heterozygous FAM20C gene variants in a patient with severe Raine syndrome: a case report

Journal

FRONTIERS IN GENETICS
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2023.1179163

Keywords

case report; raine syndrome; craniofacial dysmorphism; osteosclerosis; FAM20C gene; congenital disorder

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Raine syndrome is a congenital disorder caused by mutations in the FAM20C gene. It is characterized by typical facial dysmorphism, generalized osteosclerosis, and other possible symptoms such as intracranial calcification, hearing loss, and seizures. We report a severe case of Raine syndrome in a non-consanguineous family, with the patient exhibiting distinct facial dysmorphism, short neck, narrow chest, and curved tibia. Genetic testing confirmed two variants in the FAM20C gene, one pathogenic and one likely pathogenic, in both the patient and the parents.
Raine syndrome is a congenital disorder caused by biallelic mutations in the FAM20C gene. While most diagnosed cases of the syndrome are lethal in the first few months of life, there are also reports of non-lethal cases with Raine syndrome. The characteristic of this syndrome is typical facial dysmorphism and generalized osteosclerosis, as well as possible intracranial calcification, hearing loss, and seizures. We report a case of a 4-day-old patient at the time of examination, born with a distinct facial dysmorphism, short neck, narrow chest, and curved tibia. The parents, affirmative gypsy and non-consanguineous, had a previous male child born with the same phenotype who died at 4 months old. The computed tomography scan revealed choanal atresia, while transfontanelar ultrasound showed hypoplasia of the frontal and temporal lobes, corpus callosum dysgenesis, and multiple areas of intracranial hyperechogenicity. The chest X-Ray revealed generalized increased bone density. A skeletal disorders gene panel was performed which identified two variants in the FAM20C gene: a pathogenic variant c.1291C>T (p.Gln431*) and a likely pathogenic variant (c.1135G>A) (p.Gly379Arg), confirming the clinical diagnosis. The parents were also tested, and each was found to carry one of the variants. The particularity of this case is the severe phenotype in a compound heterozygous case that consists of FAM20C c.1291C>T (p.Gln431*) variant that has recently been reported in the literature. Also, our case is one of the few compound-heterozygous mutations in the FAM20C gene that has been described in a non-consanguineous marriage.

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