Expanding Phenotype of Poirier-Bienvenu Syndrome: New Evidence from an Italian Multicentrical Cohort of Patients

Genes (Basel). 2022 Jan 30;13(2):276. doi: 10.3390/genes13020276.

Abstract

Background: Poirier-Bienvenu Neurodevelopmental Syndrome (POBINDS) is a rare disease linked to mutations of the CSNK2B gene, which encodes for a subunit of caseinkinase CK2 involved in neuronal growth and synaptic transmission. Its main features include early-onset epilepsy and intellectual disability. Despite the lack of cases described, it appears that POBINDS could manifest with a wide range of phenotypes, possibly related to the different mutations of CSNK2B.

Methods: Our multicentric, retrospective study recruited nine patients with POBINDS, detected using next-generation sequencing panels and whole-exome sequencing. Clinical, laboratory, and neuroimaging data were reported for each patient in order to assess the severity of phenotype, and eventually, a correlation with the type of CSNK2B mutation.

Results: We reported nine unrelated patients with heterozygous de novo mutations of the CSNK2B gene. All cases presented epilepsy, and eight patients were associated with a different degree of intellectual disability. Other features detected included endocrinological and vascular abnormalities and dysmorphisms. Genetic analysis revealed six new variants of CSNK2B that have not been reported previously.

Conclusion: Although it was not possible to assess a genotype-phenotype correlation in our patients, our research further expands the phenotype spectrum of POBINDS patients, identifying new mutations occurring in the CSNK2B gene.

Keywords: CSNK2B; Pobinds; epilepsy; neurodevelopment; seizure.

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Developmental Disabilities / genetics
  • Epilepsy* / genetics
  • Humans
  • Intellectual Disability* / genetics
  • Phenotype
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Syndrome