Biallelic ATP2B1 variants as a likely cause of a novel neurodevelopmental malformation syndrome with primary hypoparathyroidism

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Abstract

ATP2B1 encodes plasma membrane calcium-transporting-ATPase1 and plays an essential role in maintaining intracellular calcium homeostasis that regulates diverse signaling pathways. Heterozygous de novo missense and truncating ATP2B1 variants are associated with a neurodevelopmental phenotype of variable expressivity. We describe a proband with distinctive craniofacial gestalt, Pierre-Robin sequence, neurodevelopmental and growth deficit, periventricular heterotopia, brachymesophalangy, cutaneous syndactyly, and persistent hypocalcemia from primary hypoparathyroidism. Proband-parent trio exome sequencing identified compound heterozygous ATP2B1 variants: a maternally inherited splice-site (c.3060+2 T > G) and paternally inherited missense c.2938 G > T; p.(Val980Leu). Reverse-transcription-PCR on the proband’s fibroblast-derived mRNA showed aberrantly spliced ATP2B1 transcripts targeted for nonsense-mediated decay. All correctly-spliced ATP2B1 mRNA encoding p.(Val980Leu) functionally causes decreased cellular Ca2+ extrusion. Immunoblotting showed reduced fibroblast ATP2B1. We conclude that biallelic ATP2B1 variants are the likely cause of the proband’s phenotype, strengthening the association of ATP2B1 as a neurodevelopmental gene and expanding the phenotypic characterization of a biallelic loss-of-function genotype.

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Yap, P., Riley, L. G., Kakadia, P. M., Bohlander, S. K., Curran, B., Rahimi, M. J., … Le Quesne Stabej, P. (2024). Biallelic ATP2B1 variants as a likely cause of a novel neurodevelopmental malformation syndrome with primary hypoparathyroidism. European Journal of Human Genetics, 32(1), 125–129. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41431-023-01484-9

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