Bi-allelic SMO variants in hypothalamic hamartoma: a recessive cause of Pallister-Hall syndrome

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Abstract

Pallister-Hall syndrome, typically caused by germline or de novo variants within the GLI3 gene, has key features of hypothalamic hamartoma and polydactyly. Recently, a few similar cases have been described with bi-allelic SMO variants. We describe two siblings born to non-consanguineous unaffected parents presenting with hypothalamic hamartoma, post-axial polydactyly, microcephaly amongst other developmental anomalies. Previous clinical diagnostic exome analysis had excluded a pathogenic variant in GLI3. We performed exome sequencing re-analysis and identified bi-allelic SMO variants including a missense and synonymous variant in both affected siblings. We functionally characterised this synonymous variant showing it induces exon 8 skipping within the SMO transcript. Our results confirm bi-allelic SMO variants as an uncommon cause of Pallister-Hall syndrome and describe a novel exon-skipping mechanism, expanding the molecular architecture of this new clinico-molecular disorder.

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Green, T. E., Schimmel, M., Schubert, S., Lemke, J. R., Bennett, M. F., Hildebrand, M. S., & Berkovic, S. F. (2022). Bi-allelic SMO variants in hypothalamic hamartoma: a recessive cause of Pallister-Hall syndrome. European Journal of Human Genetics, 30(3), 384–388. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41431-021-01023-4

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