Clinical Description
Snyder-Robinson syndrome (SRS) is an X-linked intellectual disability syndrome with a specific clinical phenotype consisting of asthenic build, facial dysmorphism with a prominent lower lip, kyphoscoliosis, osteoporosis, and speech abnormalities.
To date, 20 individuals have been identified with a pathogenic variant in SMS [Peron et al 2013, Zhang et al 2013, Albert et al 2015, Abela et al 2016, Larcher et al 2020]. The following description of the phenotypic features associated with this condition is based on these reports.
Table 2.
Features of Snyder-Robinson Syndrome
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Feature | Proportion of Persons w/Feature | Comment |
---|
Intellectual
disability
| 22/22 | Moderate to severe |
Hypotonia
| 22/22 | Usually presents at birth & is persistent |
Speech
abnormalities
| 19/21 | Nasal, dysarthric, coarse, or absent |
Ambulation
abnormalities
| 15/19 | Ranges from unsteady gait to inability to walk |
Asthenic
body build
| 19/20 | Low muscle mass persistent |
Short stature
| 14/19 | 1-2 SD below mean |
Craniofacial
features
| 18/20 | Incl asymmetric face, prominent lower lip, & high, narrow, or cleft palate |
Early-onset
osteoporosis
| 16/16 | Fractures |
Seizures
| 15/22 | |
Long hands
| 14/15 | |
Long great toes
| 10/14 | |
Onset. Developmental delay and facial dysmorphism manifest within the first year of life.
Developmental delay. Hypotonia is usually present in the neonatal period which can persist into early childhood. Developmental delay usually presents as failure to meet milestones and then evolves to moderate to profound intellectual disability. The majority of males with SRS (22 published, 13 unpublished) do not appear to have progressive cognitive decline; rather, they remain cognitively stable throughout their lifetime. Those who develop speech (10/14) develop it late, some as late as age five years. Most individuals with SRS are able to follow simple commands. For two individuals who had no speech, it is unclear if a contributing factor was the absence of social contact [de Alencastro et al 2008]. Delay in motor development, observed in the majority of individuals with SRS, usually presents with delays in normal movements that occur in early childhood and do not resolve.
Progression. All reported males with SRS have maintained previously acquired skills; however, two recently identified unreported males have had progressive neurologic decline and loss of previously obtained skills. The measured IQ and cognitive functioning were highest in the original family, possibly due to the presence of residual SMS enzyme activity [Snyder & Robinson 1969, Cason et al 2003].
Asthenic habitus and low muscle mass usually develop during the first year. Although decreased strength is not described in males with SRS, most have progressive loss of muscle mass. Loss of muscle mass occurs even in males who are ambulatory, suggesting that the loss is probably the result of an underlying defect, not lack of use.
Mild short stature (73%). Growth rates are normal but the length or height is at least 1 SD below the mean. However, height on the 13 males for which data was available was variable, ranging from the 95th percentile to 3 SD below the mean.
Craniofacial features include asymmetric face (64% [13/20]), prominent lower lip (79% [16/20]), and high, narrow, or cleft palate (83% [15/17]). Head circumference is often in the upper centiles.
Osteoporosis. During the first decade of life, males with SRS develop osteoporosis. Most experience fractures in the absence of trauma or after minor trauma within the first decade, at which point the osteoporosis is discovered; the long bones are most severely affected. Among males reported, the osteoporosis and fracture activity do not progressively worsen with age but remain at the severity found at the time of diagnosis. Bone density measurements were documented in two individuals [Albert et al 2015]. The mechanism of decreased bone mineral density is not well understood
Other musculoskeletal features. Kyphoscoliosis (13/16) can appear within the first decade of life. This observation is rather rare in other X-linked conditions. Limb contractures are rare, having only been noted in four males. Abnormal pectus was noted in nine males.
Seizures (67%). Usually present by early childhood. Severity and frequency vary. In some affected individuals, seizures may be drug-resistant [Authors’ personal observation].
Brain MRI findings. In individuals for which brain imaging was done, ventricular dilatation was noted in two of 11 individuals, a thin corpus callosum was noted in three of ten individuals. Abnormal calcification (which has been noted in a few individuals) occurs in the absence of calcium supplementation.
Genital abnormalities reported in 15% of males included low testicular volume, hypospadias, and undescended testes.
Renal complications have occurred in 15% of males including nephrocalcinosis (unrelated to calcium administration) and renal cysts reported in three individuals with SRS.
Skewed X-chromosome inactivation has been observed in heterozygous females in at least three families with SRS [Cason et al 2003; de Alencastro et al 2008; Author, personal communication]. It is unclear if skewed X-chromosome inactivation is a protective mechanism. In at least one of the families, presence of the SMS pathogenic variant in a heterozygous female is not associated with skewing of X-chromosome inactivation [Cason et al 2003].
Genotype-Phenotype Correlations
No clear genotype-phenotype correlations have been established for Snyder-Robinson syndrome. Even within a family, the phenotype varies; for example, in one family IQ values ranged from 46 to 77.
Based on the limited data available, the c.166G>A (p.Gly56Ser), c.388C>T (p.Arg130Cys), and c.443A>G (p.Gln148Arg) pathogenic variants have been associated with more severe manifestations [de Alencastro et al 2008, Albert et al 2015, Abela et al 2016].
A male infant with an SMS truncating variant, the first one observed, died a short time after birth [Larcher et al 2020]. The clinical presentation was quite severe, with multiple organ systems involved.
Penetrance
All individuals with SRS have deficient spermine synthase enzyme activity. However, as its prevalence in the general population has not been determined, penetrance of deficient spermine synthase activity as SRS cannot be stated.
Sequence variants of SMS have been reported for one seemingly unaffected male [Kim et al 2009]. Spermine synthase activity was not measured, and thus the functional consequences of this variant are unclear.
Additionally, five other nonsynonymous SMS variants were identified in large sequencing cohorts; phenotype, sex, and enzyme function are unavailable for these individuals.