Pathogenic variants in chromatin-related genes: Linking immune dysregulation to neuroregression and acute neuropsychiatric disorders

Dev Med Child Neurol. 2025 Feb 22. doi: 10.1111/dmcn.16276. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

We report eight children with de novo pathogenic DNA variants in chromatin-related genes: MORC2, CHD7, KANSL1, KMT2D, ZMYND11, HIST1HIE, EP300, and KMT2B. All children experienced infection or vaccine-provoked neuroregression or abrupt-onset neuropsychiatric syndromes. Most had delayed development (n = 6) before the first regression, and four had immune deficiency or autoimmunity (n = 4). At a mean age of 4 years 2 months (range 1-8 years), symptoms included infection-provoked autistic/language regression (n = 6), cognitive decline (n = 3), gait deterioration (n = 3), or abrupt-onset anxiety, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and/or tics (n = 5). Three children had ongoing infection-provoked deteriorations. Six children benefited from intravenous immunoglobulin (n = 3) or antibiotics (n = 4). Ribonucleic acid expression of the eight chromatin genes was similar in neuronal, glial, and peripheral leukocytes, unlike non-chromatin neurodevelopmental genes, which have predominantly neuronal expression. These cases demonstrate the role of chromatin dysregulation in autistic regression and abrupt-onset neuropsychiatric syndromes, potentially related to brain and immune gene dysregulation.

Publication types

  • Case Reports