Cohort Expansion and Genotype-Phenotype Analysis of RAB11A-Associated Neurodevelopmental Disorder.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-2024
Publication Title
Pediatric neurology
Abstract
BACKGROUND: GTPases of the Rab family are important orchestrators of membrane trafficking, and their dysregulation has been linked to a variety of neuropathologies. In 2017, we established a causal link between RAB11A variants and developmental and epileptic encephalopathy. In this study, we expand the phenotype of RAB11A-associated neurodevelopmental disorder and explore genotype-phenotype correlations.
METHODS: We assessed 16 patients with pathogenic or likely pathogenic RAB11A variants, generally de novo, heterozygous missense variants. One individual had a homozygous nonsense variant, although concomitant with a pathogenic LAMA2 variant, which made their respective contributions to the phenotype difficult to discriminate.
RESULTS: We reinforce the finding that certain RAB11A missense variants lead to intellectual disability and developmental delays. Other clinical features might include gait disturbances, hypotonia, magnetic resonance imaging abnormalities, visual anomalies, dysmorphisms, early adrenarche, and obesity. Epilepsy seems to be less common and linked to variants outside the binding sites. Individuals with variants in the binding sites seem to have a more multisystemic, nonepileptic phenotype.
CONCLUSIONS: Similar to other Rab-related disorders, RAB11A-associated neurodevelopmental disorder can also impact gait, tonus, brain anatomy and physiology, vision, adrenarche, and body weight and structure. Epilepsy seems to affect the minority of patients with variants outside the binding sites.
Volume
160
First Page
45
Last Page
53
Recommended Citation
Borroto MC, Patel H, Srivastava S, Swanson LC, Keren B, Whalen S, et al [Seaver LH]. Cohort expansion and genotype-phenotype analysis of rab11a-associated neurodevelopmental disorder. Pediatr Neurol. 2024 Nov;160:45-53. doi: 10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2024.07.010. PMID: 39181022.
DOI
10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2024.07.010
ISSN
1873-5150
PubMed ID
39181022