Entry - #618820 - GENITOURINARY AND/OR BRAIN MALFORMATION SYNDROME; GUBS - OMIM
 
# 618820

GENITOURINARY AND/OR BRAIN MALFORMATION SYNDROME; GUBS


Phenotype-Gene Relationships

Location Phenotype Phenotype
MIM number
Inheritance Phenotype
mapping key
Gene/Locus Gene/Locus
MIM number
12q21.2-q21.31 Genitourinary and/or/brain malformation syndrome 618820 AD 3 PPP1R12A 602021
Clinical Synopsis
 

INHERITANCE
- Autosomal dominant
HEAD & NECK
Head
- Macrocephaly
- Microcephaly
- Fetal acrania
Face
- Facial asymmetry, mild
- Long face
- Triangular face
- Flat facial profile
- Long philtrum
- Micrognathia
Ears
- Low-set ears
- Large protruding ears
- Deformed pinnae
Eyes
- Hypertelorism
- Epicanthal folds
- Epicanthus inversus
- Short palpebral fissures
- Long palpebral fissures
- Upslanting palpebral fissures
- Ptosis
- Strabismus
- Astigmatism
- Hyperopia
- Reduced vision
- Rod and cone dysfunction, bilateral
- Latent nystagmus
Nose
- Absent nasal bone
- Small pointed nose
- Wide nasal tip
Mouth
- Small mouth
CARDIOVASCULAR
Vascular
- Patent ductus arteriosus
- Aberrant mesenteric blood supply
CHEST
Breasts
- Gynecomastia, mild
ABDOMEN
External Features
- Omphalocele
Gastrointestinal
- Blind shallow rectal cleft
- Echogenic bowel (on 11-week antenatal ultrasound)
- Jejunal atresia
- Ileal atresia
GENITOURINARY
External Genitalia (Male)
- Ambiguous genitalia
- Gonadal dysgenesis
- Micropenis
- Chordee
- Hypospadias, variable
External Genitalia (Female)
- Clitoral hypertrophy
- Urogenital sinus
- Posterior labial fusion
- Labial rugation
- Labial pigmentation
Internal Genitalia (Male)
- Cryptorchidism
- Streak gonads
Internal Genitalia (Female)
- Uterus didelphys
- Streak gonads
- Gonadal degeneration
Kidneys
- Renal asymmetry
- Pyelectasis
Ureters
- Hydronephrosis (grade 1)
SKELETAL
- Delayed bone age
Skull
- Macrocephaly
- Microcephaly
- Fetal acrania
Spine
- Kyphosis
- Nonvisualization of the lumbosacral spine (on 11-week antenatal ultrasound)
Limbs
- Stiff joints
Hands
- Ulnar drift
- Fisting
- Fifth-finger clinodactyly
Feet
- Toe syndactyly
- Foot pronation
MUSCLE, SOFT TISSUES
- Hypotonia
- Myoclonus
- Decreased subcutaneous fat
NEUROLOGIC
Central Nervous System
- Developmental delay
- Intellectual disability
- Limited speech
- Holoprosencephaly (semilobar or middle interhemispheric variant)
- Colpocephaly
- Encephalocele
- Anencephaly
- Hydrocephalus
- Agenesis of corpus callosum
- Dysgenesis of corpus callosum
- Absent septum pellucidum
- Polymicrogyria
- Chiari malformation
- Gray matter heterotopia
- Seizures
- Appendicular hypotonia
- Unsteady gait
Behavioral Psychiatric Manifestations
- Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
- Autistic features
- Defiance
MISCELLANEOUS
- Disorders of sex differentiation observed, with 46,XY individuals who appeared to be phenotypic females
- 46,XY phenotypic males may have uterus, Fallopian tubes, and/or ovaries present
- 46,XY phenotypic females may have normal-appearing or abnormal uterus, Fallopian tubes, and/or ovaries present
MOLECULAR BASIS
- Caused by mutation in the protein phosphatase 1, regulatory subunit 12A gene (PPP1R12A, 602021.0001)

TEXT

A number sign (#) is used with this entry because of evidence that genitourinary and/or brain malformation syndrome (GUBS) is caused by heterozygous mutation in the PPP1R12A gene (602021) on chromosome 12q21.


Description

Genitourinary and/or brain malformation syndrome (GUBS) is characterized by variable genitourinary anomalies, including disorders of sex differentiation, and brain abnormalities ranging from agenesis of the corpus callosum to anencephaly. Other variable congenital anomalies have been observed, including omphalocele and gastrointestinal tract atresia with aberrant vessels (Hughes et al., 2020).


Clinical Features

Hughes et al. (2020) reported 12 unrelated individuals with genitourinary and/or brain malformations and mutations in the PPP1R12A gene. Midline brain malformations were present in 5 patients, with 2 exhibiting holoprosencephaly; the most severe brain finding was anencephaly. Genitourinary anomalies were observed in 9 patients, including 4 who were 46,XY individuals with female external genitalia. Three patients showed both brain and genitourinary anomalies. Patients exhibited a wide spectrum of genitourinary phenotypes, ranging from partial gonadal dysgenesis with micropenis, hypospadias, and ambiguous genitals with Mullerian duct remnants, to complete gonadal dysgenesis in a genotypic 46,XY individual with female external genitalia. Other congenital anomalies included omphalocele, jejunal and ileal atresia with aberrant mesenteric blood supply, and syndactyly. Noting that all 9 of the 46,XY individuals had urogenital anomalies, including 3 who also exhibited brain abnormalities, whereas the 3 patients who were 46,XX only showed severe brain anomalies, the authors suggested a possible sex-influenced mechanism. However, 2 of the 46,XX patients were 'not evaluated' for genitourinary malformations; in the third 46,XX individual, genitourinary malformation was listed as 'not described on autopsy'; and 3 of the 46,XY patients were 'not evaluated' for brain malformations.


Inheritance

The heterozygous mutations in the PPP1R12A gene that were identified in affected members of the families with GUBS reported by Hughes et al. (2020) occurred de novo.


Molecular Genetics

In 12 unrelated patients with genitourinary and/or brain malformations, Hughes et al. (2020) identified heterozygosity for de novo premature termination codon (PTC) variants in the PPP1R12A gene (see, e.g., 602021.0001-602021.0003). The authors noted that the patients exhibited a broad spectrum of clinical manifestations, and that the PPP1R12A variants occurred across multiple exons and 1 intron, with no clear genotype-phenotype correlation observed with specific variants.


REFERENCES

  1. Hughes, J. J., Alkhunaizi, E., Kruszka, P., Pyle, L. C., Grange, D. K., Berger, S. I., Payne, K. K., Masser-Frye, D., Hu, T., CHristie, M. R., Clegg, N. J., Everson, J. L., and 18 others. Loss-of-function variants in PPP1R12A: from isolated sex reversal to holoprosencephaly spectrum and urogenital anomalies. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 106: 121-128, 2020. [PubMed: 31883643, related citations] [Full Text]


Creation Date:
Marla J. F. O'Neill : 03/19/2020
carol : 08/03/2020
alopez : 03/19/2020

# 618820

GENITOURINARY AND/OR BRAIN MALFORMATION SYNDROME; GUBS


Phenotype-Gene Relationships

Location Phenotype Phenotype
MIM number
Inheritance Phenotype
mapping key
Gene/Locus Gene/Locus
MIM number
12q21.2-q21.31 Genitourinary and/or/brain malformation syndrome 618820 Autosomal dominant 3 PPP1R12A 602021

TEXT

A number sign (#) is used with this entry because of evidence that genitourinary and/or brain malformation syndrome (GUBS) is caused by heterozygous mutation in the PPP1R12A gene (602021) on chromosome 12q21.


Description

Genitourinary and/or brain malformation syndrome (GUBS) is characterized by variable genitourinary anomalies, including disorders of sex differentiation, and brain abnormalities ranging from agenesis of the corpus callosum to anencephaly. Other variable congenital anomalies have been observed, including omphalocele and gastrointestinal tract atresia with aberrant vessels (Hughes et al., 2020).


Clinical Features

Hughes et al. (2020) reported 12 unrelated individuals with genitourinary and/or brain malformations and mutations in the PPP1R12A gene. Midline brain malformations were present in 5 patients, with 2 exhibiting holoprosencephaly; the most severe brain finding was anencephaly. Genitourinary anomalies were observed in 9 patients, including 4 who were 46,XY individuals with female external genitalia. Three patients showed both brain and genitourinary anomalies. Patients exhibited a wide spectrum of genitourinary phenotypes, ranging from partial gonadal dysgenesis with micropenis, hypospadias, and ambiguous genitals with Mullerian duct remnants, to complete gonadal dysgenesis in a genotypic 46,XY individual with female external genitalia. Other congenital anomalies included omphalocele, jejunal and ileal atresia with aberrant mesenteric blood supply, and syndactyly. Noting that all 9 of the 46,XY individuals had urogenital anomalies, including 3 who also exhibited brain abnormalities, whereas the 3 patients who were 46,XX only showed severe brain anomalies, the authors suggested a possible sex-influenced mechanism. However, 2 of the 46,XX patients were 'not evaluated' for genitourinary malformations; in the third 46,XX individual, genitourinary malformation was listed as 'not described on autopsy'; and 3 of the 46,XY patients were 'not evaluated' for brain malformations.


Inheritance

The heterozygous mutations in the PPP1R12A gene that were identified in affected members of the families with GUBS reported by Hughes et al. (2020) occurred de novo.


Molecular Genetics

In 12 unrelated patients with genitourinary and/or brain malformations, Hughes et al. (2020) identified heterozygosity for de novo premature termination codon (PTC) variants in the PPP1R12A gene (see, e.g., 602021.0001-602021.0003). The authors noted that the patients exhibited a broad spectrum of clinical manifestations, and that the PPP1R12A variants occurred across multiple exons and 1 intron, with no clear genotype-phenotype correlation observed with specific variants.


REFERENCES

  1. Hughes, J. J., Alkhunaizi, E., Kruszka, P., Pyle, L. C., Grange, D. K., Berger, S. I., Payne, K. K., Masser-Frye, D., Hu, T., CHristie, M. R., Clegg, N. J., Everson, J. L., and 18 others. Loss-of-function variants in PPP1R12A: from isolated sex reversal to holoprosencephaly spectrum and urogenital anomalies. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 106: 121-128, 2020. [PubMed: 31883643] [Full Text: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.12.004]


Creation Date:
Marla J. F. O'Neill : 03/19/2020

Edit History:
carol : 08/03/2020
alopez : 03/19/2020