mTOR mutations in Smith-Kingsmore syndrome: Four additional patients and a review

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Abstract

Smith-Kingsmore syndrome (SKS) OMIM #616638, also known as MINDS syndrome (ORPHA 457485), is a rare autosomal dominant disorder reported so far in 23 patients. SKS is characterized by intellectual disability, macrocephaly/hemi/megalencephaly, and seizures. It is also associated with a pattern of facial dysmorphology and other non-neurological features. Germline or mosaic mutations of the mTOR gene have been detected in all patients. The mTOR gene is a key regulator of cell growth, cell proliferation, protein synthesis and synaptic plasticity, and the mTOR pathway (PI3K-AKT-mTOR) is highly regulated and critical for cell survival and apoptosis. Mutations in different genes in this pathway result in known rare diseases implicated in hemi/megalencephaly with epilepsy, as the tuberous sclerosis complex caused by mutations in TSC1 and TSC2, or the PIK3CA-related overgrowth spectrum (PROS). We here present 4 new cases of SKS, review all clinical and molecular aspects of this disorder, as well as some characteristics of the patients with only brain mTOR somatic mutations.

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Gordo, G., Tenorio, J., Arias, P., Santos-Simarro, F., García-Miñaur, S., Moreno, J. C., … Lapunzina, P. (2018). mTOR mutations in Smith-Kingsmore syndrome: Four additional patients and a review. Clinical Genetics, 93(4), 762–775. https://doi.org/10.1111/cge.13135

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