Background: The calcium/calmodulin-dependent serine protein kinase gene (CASK) is an essential gene in mammals, critical for neurodevelopment. The purpose of this study is to expand the understanding of the diagnosis of CASK-linked disorders.
Materials/methods: From clinical and genetic mutational analyses, relevant data in 2 Han Chinese patients were collected and analyzed. Real-time quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) was performed to investigate the CASK expression levels in the patients. The X-chromosome inactivation (XCI) patterns of the patients and their nuclear families were tested by quantitation of methylation of the polymorphic human androgen receptor (HUMARA) locus.
Results: Two Han Chinese patients both presented with intellectual disability (ID), microcephaly with pontine and cerebellar hypoplasia (MICPCH). Two de novo mutations of c.82C>T (p.Arg28*) and c.846C>G (p.Tyr282*) in CASK have been investigated and predicted to be deleterious, which have produced truncated proteins. The functional protein association network of STRING (http://string-db.org) generated three-dimensional (3D) atomic models based on protein sequences in CASK and two Arg28 and Tyr282 residues were marked. RT-qPCR showed lower copy numbers of CASK expression in the patients than in their parents, as well as the sex- and age- matched control groups. Patient 1 showed a skewed XCI pattern, while no related changes noted in patient 2.
Conclusions: Patients carrying different nonsense variants may have different degrees of different clinical phenotypes. This study expands the spectrum of genotype and phenotype correlations of CASK-linked disorders in the Han Chinese ethnicity and provides new insights into the molecular mechanism.
Keywords: CASK; Han Chinese; X-chromosome inactivation; developmental disorder; microcephaly.
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