Novel Variants and Clinical Characteristics of 16 Patients from Southeast Asia with Genetic Variants in Neurofibromin-1

J Pediatr Genet. 2021 Oct 19;12(2):135-140. doi: 10.1055/s-0041-1736457. eCollection 2023 Jun.

Abstract

Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is one of the most common inherited disorders. It is caused by mutations in the neurofibromin-1 gene ( NF1 ) and affects the formation and growth of nerve tissues. More than 3,600 pathogenic variants in the NF1 gene have been identified from patients with most of the germline variants are from the Western populations. We found 16 patients (15 Chinese and 1 Asian Indian) who had heterozygous variants in NF1 through targeted next-generation sequencing. There were 15 different variants: 4 frameshift, 4 nonsense, 5 missense, and 2 splice variants. One nonsense variant and three frameshift variants had never been reported in any population or patient database. Twelve of the 16 patients met the NF1 diagnostic criteria, and each was found to have a pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant. Three different missense variants of unknown significance were discovered in the other four patients who did not meet NF1 diagnostic criteria. Our findings add four novel variants to the list of genetic mutations linked to NF1's various clinical manifestations.

Keywords: Lisch nodules; NF1 variants; café-au-lait spots; neurofibromatosis type 1; optic pathway glioma.