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Article Abstract

Background: PhelanrMcDermid syndrome (PMS) is an uncommon autosomal dominant inherited developmental disorder. The main characteristics are hypotonia, intellectual disability, autism spectrum disorder, autism-like behaviors and tiny facial deformities. Most cases are caused by the deletion of the 22q13 genomic region, including the deletion of .

Methods: Genetic and phenotype evaluations of ten Chinese pediatric patients were performed. The clinical phenotypes and genetic testing results were collected statistically. We analyzed the deletion of the 22q13 genomic region and small mutations in (GRCh37/hg19) and performed parental genotype verification to determine whether it was related to the parents or was a novel mutation.

Results: The age of the patients diagnosed with PMS ranged from 0 to 12 years old. Nine of the pediatric patients experienced Intellectual Disability, language motion development delay and hypotonia as prominent clinical features. One subject had autism, two subjects had abnormal electroencephalogram discharge and one subject was aborted after fetal diagnosis. Three patients had a mutation or deletion. All but the aborted fetuses had intellectual disability. Among the ten patients, a deletion in the 22q13 region occurred in seven patients, with the smallest being 60.6 kb and the largest being >5.5 Mb. Three patients had heterozygous mutations in the gene.

Conclusion: All ten patients had novel mutations, and three of these were missense or frameshift mutations. For the first time reported, it is predicted that the amino acid termination code may appear before protein synthesis. The novel mutations we discovered provide a reference for clinical research and the diagnosis of PMS.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9445366PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2022.888001DOI Listing

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