Further Delineation of the Microcephaly-Micromelia Syndrome Associated with Loss-of-Function Variants in DONSON

Mol Syndromol. 2019 May;10(3):171-176. doi: 10.1159/000497337. Epub 2019 Mar 6.

Abstract

The DONSON gene encodes the downstream neighbor of SON, a replisome component that stabilizes the replication fork during replication. A severe form of microcephalic dwarfism, microcephaly-micromelia syndrome (MIMIS), has been recently associated with DONSON biallelic loss of function. Affected fetuses suffer severe growth restriction, microcephaly, and variable limb malformations which result in intrauterine or perinatal death. All described fetuses carried a homozygous founder mutation (c.1047-9A>G), a splice-altering variant that leads to transcript degradation. We evaluated 2 newborns from a consanguineous Emirati family with severe microcephaly, micromelia, craniofacial dysmorphism, and skeletal abnormalities; both died shortly after birth. Here, we report the second homozygous loss-of-function variant (c.763C>T) in DONSON causing MIMIS, and we provide detailed clinical description of this very rare disorder. In addition, we review all MIMIS cases in the literature and summarize the striking features of this phenotype. This manuscript is aimed to increase the clinical understanding of this rare, extremely severe disorder and encourage clinical and molecular geneticists to consider screening for DONSON loss-of-function variants in families with recurrent pregnancy loss and/or perinatal deaths.

Keywords: Intrauterine growth restriction; Microcephaly-micromelia syndrome; Replication fork stability.

Publication types

  • Case Reports