Anosmia, Isolated Congenital

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Retrieved
2019-09-22
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Clinical Features

The main reason for considering anosmia separately is that it is not clear whether it is always merely part of the Kallmann syndrome (see 147950 and 308700) or a distinct disorder. Affected males reported by Glaser (1918) in which X-linked inheritance was suggested had 'excessive sex interest.' It was a Russian Jewish family like those of Kallmann et al. (1944).

Molecular Genetics

Associations Pending Confirmation

In twin brothers and a sister with congenital anosmia, born to parents of Ashkenazi-Yemenite origin, Alkelai et al. (2016) identified a c.4829C-T transition in the TENM1 gene (300588), resulting in a pro1610-to-leu (P1610L) substitution at a highly conserved residue. Sanger sequencing of the extended family revealed that the unaffected mother and maternal grandmother were carriers of the variant. The affected female and her mother had X-inactivation ratios of 28:72 and 63:37, respectively. The variant was not found in approximately 67,600 control samples. Alkelai et al. (2016) stated that additional studies were required to confirm the role of TENM1 in congenital anosmia.