Literature DB >> 25138099

Loss-of-function variants of SETD5 cause intellectual disability and the core phenotype of microdeletion 3p25.3 syndrome.

Alma Kuechler1, Alexander M Zink2, Thomas Wieland3, Hermann-Josef Lüdecke1, Kirsten Cremer2, Leonardo Salviati4, Pamela Magini5, Kimia Najafi6, Christiane Zweier7, Johanna Christina Czeschik1, Stefan Aretz2, Sabine Endele7, Federica Tamburrino8, Claudia Pinato4, Maurizio Clementi4, Jasmin Gundlach3, Carina Maylahn2, Laura Mazzanti8, Eva Wohlleber2, Thomas Schwarzmayr3, Roxana Kariminejad6, Avner Schlessinger9, Dagmar Wieczorek1, Tim M Strom3, Gaia Novarino10, Hartmut Engels2.   

Abstract

Intellectual disability (ID) has an estimated prevalence of 2-3%. Due to its extreme heterogeneity, the genetic basis of ID remains elusive in many cases. Recently, whole exome sequencing (WES) studies revealed that a large proportion of sporadic cases are caused by de novo gene variants. To identify further genes involved in ID, we performed WES in 250 patients with unexplained ID and their unaffected parents and included exomes of 51 previously sequenced child-parents trios in the analysis. Exome analysis revealed de novo intragenic variants in SET domain-containing 5 (SETD5) in two patients. One patient carried a nonsense variant, and the other an 81 bp deletion located across a splice-donor site. Chromosomal microarray diagnostics further identified four de novo non-recurrent microdeletions encompassing SETD5. CRISPR/Cas9 mutation modelling of the two intragenic variants demonstrated nonsense-mediated decay of the resulting transcripts, pointing to a loss-of-function (LoF) and haploinsufficiency as the common disease-causing mechanism of intragenic SETD5 sequence variants and SETD5-containing microdeletions. In silico domain prediction of SETD5, a predicted SET domain-containing histone methyltransferase (HMT), substantiated the presence of a SET domain and identified a novel putative PHD domain, strengthening a functional link to well-known histone-modifying ID genes. All six patients presented with ID and certain facial dysmorphisms, suggesting that SETD5 sequence variants contribute substantially to the microdeletion 3p25.3 phenotype. The present report of two SETD5 LoF variants in 301 patients demonstrates a prevalence of 0.7% and thus SETD5 variants as a relatively frequent cause of ID.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25138099      PMCID: PMC4795044          DOI: 10.1038/ejhg.2014.165

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Hum Genet        ISSN: 1018-4813            Impact factor:   4.246


  31 in total

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  26 in total

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