Activity

Filter

Cancel
Date Panel Item Activity
6 actions
Mendeliome v1.476 PDIA6 Chirag Patel edited their review of gene: PDIA6: Added comment: 2nd patient with large polycystic kidneys, death and end stage renal failure at 18 months, microcephaly, bilateral inguinal hernias, umbilical hernia, developmental delay, bilateral sensorineural hearing loss, visual impairment, steatorrhea, fibrotic changes in liver, and insulin-dependent diabetes. WGS found homozygous stop-gain variant (Tyr368*) in PDIA6. Segregation not performed.; Changed rating: AMBER; Changed publications: PMID: 35856135; Changed phenotypes: Polycystic kidney disease, infancy-onset diabetes, and microcephaly
Mendeliome v0.7188 PDIA6 Zornitza Stark Marked gene: PDIA6 as ready
Mendeliome v0.7188 PDIA6 Zornitza Stark Gene: pdia6 has been classified as Amber List (Moderate Evidence).
Mendeliome v0.7188 PDIA6 Zornitza Stark Classified gene: PDIA6 as Amber List (moderate evidence)
Mendeliome v0.7188 PDIA6 Zornitza Stark Gene: pdia6 has been classified as Amber List (Moderate Evidence).
Mendeliome v0.7187 PDIA6 Zornitza Stark gene: PDIA6 was added
gene: PDIA6 was added to Mendeliome. Sources: Literature
Mode of inheritance for gene: PDIA6 was set to BIALLELIC, autosomal or pseudoautosomal
Phenotypes for gene: PDIA6 were set to Asphyxiating thoracic dystrophy (ATD) syndrome and infantile‐onset diabetes
Review for gene: PDIA6 was set to AMBER
Added comment: Amber in view of the good quality functional data.

1 case with asphyxiating thoracic dystrophy (ATD) syndrome and infantile‐onset diabetes. Whole exome sequencing revealed a homozygous frameshift variant in the PDIA6 gene. RNA expression was reduced in a gene dosage‐dependent manner, supporting a loss‐of‐function effect of this variant. Phenotypic correlation with the previously reported mouse model recapitulated the growth defect and delay, early lethality, coagulation, diabetes, immunological, and polycystic kidney disease phenotypes. The phenotype of the current patient is consistent with phenotypes associated with the disruption of PDIA6 and the sensors of UPR in mice and humans.
Sources: Literature