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Arch Iran Med. 2025;28(5): 313-321.
doi: 10.34172/aim.33542
  Abstract View: 113
  PDF Download: 77

Review Article

Expanding the Clinical Phenotype Associated with the NIN Gene; Report of a Patient with Short Stature, Microcephaly and Hearing Loss

Shima Zamanian Najafabadi 1 ORCID logo, Zeinab Ghorbanoghli 1 ORCID logo, Zhila Ghaderi 1, Fariba Afroozan 1, Ali Talea 2, Fatemeh Ahangari 1, Mina Makvand 1, Hossein Najmabadi 1,3, Ariana Kariminejad 1* ORCID logo

1 Kariminejad-Najmabadi Pathology & Genetics Center, Tehran Iran
2 Metabolic Disorders Research Center, Endocrinology and Metabolism Molecular-Cellular Sciences Institute, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran Iran
3 Genetics Research Center, University of Social Welfare & Rehabilitation Sciences, Tehran, Iran
*Corresponding Author: Ariana Kariminejad, Email: arianakariminejad@yahoo.com

Abstract

To date, there are very few reports regarding patients with bi-allelic variants in the NIN gene. There is one report of two sisters with severe short stature, microcephaly, and developmental delay with compound heterozygote missense variants in the NIN gene and one paper reporting a homozygote variant in the NIN gene with progressive, high-frequency sensorineural hearing loss in four siblings. The only other report is of four members of a consanguineous family with spondyloepimetaphyseal dysplasia with joint laxity-leptodactylic type (SEMDJL2) with a homozygous variant in the NIN gene. Given the scarcity of cases with NIN variants, the relationship between the phenotype and gene is provisional and our case broadens the phenotypic spectrum regarding the phenotype related to NIN gene variants.

Here, we report a patient with a homozygous variant in exon 2 of the NIN gene defined as c.3407_3409del (p.Glu1136del). Clinical findings in our patient were characteristic of microcephalic primordial dwarfism (MPD) including microcephaly, prominent nose, intellectual disability and severe short stature. In addition, this patient had bilateral hearing loss, which was not reported in the patients with MPD and variant in the NIN gene before. We identified a novel p.Glu1136del variant in the NIN gene, predicted to disrupt critical centrosome-related pathways. WES was reanalyzed for other genes which are known for deafness and no variant was identified. A family history of deafness was not present in the pedigree. This is the first report of a patient with MPD and deafness associated with the NIN gene.



Cite this article as: Zamanian Najafabadi S, Ghorbanoghli Z, Ghaderi Z, Afroozan F, Talea A, Ahangari F, et al. Expanding the clinical phenotype associated with the NIN gene; report of a patient with short stature, microcephaly and hearing loss. Arch Iran Med. 2025;28(5):313-321. doi: 10.34172/aim.33542
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Abstract View: 114

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Submitted: 26 Nov 2024
Revision: 12 Feb 2025
Accepted: 16 Mar 2025
ePublished: 01 May 2025
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