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Douzgou Houge S et al., Human Genetics and Genomics Advances - This paper reports six individuals with biallelic loss-of-function DSCAM variants, delineating a recessive syndrome of moderate-to-severe neurodevelopmental delay with poor language, early focal seizures, hypotonia, short stature, and characteristic rotatory/vertical nystagmus with cone-pathway retinal dysfunction. Key terms: DSCAM, neurodevelopmental delay, nystagmus, retinal dysfunction, electroretinography. Study Highlights: The authors describe six patients (including four newly reported) with homozygous or compound heterozygous predicted loss-of-function variants in DSCAM. All individuals share moderate-to-severe neurodevelopmental delay, impaired language, frequent hypotonia, and short stature, with focal seizures in some. A consistent ophthalmic phenotype of rotatory/vertical nystagmus and poor vision was observed, and ERG in two patients showed relative rod preservation but marked cone-pathway dysfunction, implicating cone-associated bipolar cells. The clinical and electrophysiological findings align with animal models showing disrupted retinal lamination and mosaic spacing caused by loss of DSCAM. Conclusion: Biallelic DSCAM loss-of-function defines a rare recessive neurodevelopmental syndrome characterized by motor and cognitive impairment and a distinctive, developmentally origin retinal dysfunction primarily affecting the cone pathway detectable by ERG. Music: Enjoy the music based on this article at the end of the episode. Article title: Biallelic loss-of-function variants in DSCAM cause a neurodevelopmental syndrome with nystagmus and retinal dysfunction First author: Douzgou Houge S Journal: Human Genetics and Genomics Advances DOI: 10.1016/j.xhgg.2026.100622 Reference: Douzgou Houge S., Bredrup C., Wivestad Jansson R., Bojovic O., Aljamal B.M., Al-Otaibi M., Plomp A.S., Motazacker M.M., van Genderen M.M., Mellgren A., Alkuraya H., Hikmat O., Haukanes B.I., Alkuraya F.S., Douzgos Houge G. Biallelic loss-of-function variants in DSCAM cause a neurodevelopmental syndrome with nystagmus and retinal dysfunction. Human Genetics and Genomics Advances 7, 100622 (July 9, 2026). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.xhgg.2026.100622. License: This episode is based on an open-access article published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0) – https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Support: Base by Base – Stripe donations: https://donate.stripe.com/7sY4gz71B2sN3RWac5gEg00 Official website https://basebybase.com On PaperCast Base by Base you'll discover the latest in genomics, functional genomics, structural genomics, and proteomics. Episode link: https://basebybase.com/episodes/biallelic-dscam-neurodevelopmental-nystagmus QC: This episode was checked against the original article PDF and publication metadata for the episode release published on 2026-05-26. QC Scope: - article metadata and core scientific claims from the narration - excludes analogies, intro/outro, and music - transcript coverage: The transcript covers the study’s core claims: DSCAM function and retinal organization, genetic evidence for biallelic LoF variants, the neurodevelopmental phenotype, ERG findings showing cone pathway impairment with rod preservation, animal-model context, consanguinity patterns, and ASD-related discussions. - transcript topics: DSCAM role in retinal self-avoidance and patterning; Genetic identification of DSCAM LoF variants via trio exome sequencing; Clinical phenotype: neurodevelopmental delay, language impairment, seizures, hypotonia, short stature; Ophthalmic phenotype and ERG-based retinal function (cone vs rod); Cone-associated bipolar cells in the retina as the site of dysfunction; Animal-model evidence (chicken retina and DSCAM KO mice) for retinal organization QC Summary: - factual score: 10/10 - metadata score: 10/10 - supported core claims: 6 - claims flagged for review: 0 - metadata checks passed: 4 - metadata issues found: 0 Metadata Audited: - article_doi - article_title - article_journal - license Factual Items Audited: - Six individuals with biallelic DSCAM loss-of-function variants described in the study - Cone-pathway dysfunction with preserved rod-pathway function demonstrated by ERG in some individuals - Cone-associated bipolar cells implicated as the site of dysfunction in the retina - DSCAM is required for self-neuronal avoidance; animal models show retinal disorganization when DSCAM is disrupted - Consanguineous parental relationships and twin pairs observed in the cohort - Monoallelic DSCAM variants have been associated with autism in separate studies QC result: Pass.
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