Associations among genotype, clinical phenotype, and intracellular localization of trafficking proteins in ARC syndrome.

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作者:Smith Holly, Galmes Romain, Gogolina Ekaterina, Straatman-Iwanowska Anna, Reay Kim, Banushi Blerida, Bruce Christopher K, Cullinane Andrew R, Romero Rene, Chang Richard, Ackermann Oanez, Baumann Clarisse, Cangul Hakan, Cakmak Celik Fatma, Aygun Canan, Coward Richard, Dionisi-Vici Carlo, Sibbles Barbara, Inward Carol, Kim Chong Ae, Klumperman Judith, Knisely A S, Watson Steven P, Gissen Paul
Arthrogryposis-renal dysfunction-cholestasis (ARC) syndrome is a rare autosomal recessive multisystem disorder caused by mutations in vacuolar protein sorting 33 homologue B (VPS33B) and VPS33B interacting protein, apical-basolateral polarity regulator (VIPAR). Cardinal features of ARC include congenital joint contractures, renal tubular dysfunction, cholestasis, severe failure to thrive, ichthyosis, and a defect in platelet alpha-granule biogenesis. Most patients with ARC do not survive past the first year of life. We report two patients presenting with a mild ARC phenotype, now 5.5 and 3.5 years old. Both patients were compound heterozygotes with the novel VPS33B donor splice-site mutation c.1225+5G>C in common. Immunoblotting and complementary DNA analysis suggest expression of a shorter VPS33B transcript, and cell-based assays show that c.1225+5G>C VPS33B mutant retains some ability to interact with VIPAR (and thus partial wild-type function). This study provides the first evidence of genotype-phenotype correlation in ARC and suggests that VPS33B c.1225+5G>C mutation predicts a mild ARC phenotype. We have established an interactive online database for ARC (https://grenada.lumc.nl/LOVD2/ARC) comprising all known variants in VPS33B and VIPAR. Also included in the database are 15 novel pathogenic variants in VPS33B and five in VIPAR.

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