| Literature DB >> 26477546 |
Myriam Srour1, Fadi F Hamdan2, Dianalee McKnight3, Erica Davis4, Hanna Mandel5, Jeremy Schwartzentruber6, Brissa Martin3, Lysanne Patry2, Christina Nassif2, Alexandre Dionne-Laporte7, Luis H Ospina8, Emmanuelle Lemyre2, Christine Massicotte2, Rachel Laframboise9, Bruno Maranda10, Damian Labuda2, Jean-Claude Décarie11, Françoise Rypens11, Dorith Goldsher12, Catherine Fallet-Bianco13, Jean-François Soucy2, Anne-Marie Laberge2, Catalina Maftei2, Kym Boycott14, Bernard Brais15, Renée-Myriam Boucher16, Guy A Rouleau17, Nicholas Katsanis4, Jacek Majewski6, Orly Elpeleg18, Mary K Kukolich19, Stavit Shalev20, Jacques L Michaud21.
Abstract
Joubert syndrome (JBTS) is a primarily autosomal-recessive disorder characterized by a distinctive mid-hindbrain and cerebellar malformation, oculomotor apraxia, irregular breathing, developmental delay, and ataxia. JBTS is a genetically heterogeneous ciliopathy. We sought to characterize the genetic landscape associated with JBTS in the French Canadian (FC) population. We studied 43 FC JBTS subjects from 35 families by combining targeted and exome sequencing. We identified pathogenic (n = 32 families) or possibly pathogenic (n = 2 families) variants in genes previously associated with JBTS in all of these subjects, except for one. In the latter case, we found a homozygous splice-site mutation (c.735+2T>C) in CEP104. Interestingly, we identified two additional non-FC JBTS subjects with mutations in CEP104; one of these subjects harbors a maternally inherited nonsense mutation (c.496C>T [p.Arg166*]) and a de novo splice-site mutation (c.2572-2A>G), whereas the other bears a homozygous frameshift mutation (c.1328_1329insT [p.Tyr444fs*3]) in CEP104. Previous studies have shown that CEP104 moves from the mother centriole to the tip of the primary cilium during ciliogenesis. Knockdown of CEP104 in retinal pigment epithelial (RPE1) cells resulted in severe defects in ciliogenesis. These observations suggest that CEP104 acts early during cilia formation by regulating the conversion of the mother centriole into the cilia basal body. We conclude that disruption of CEP104 causes JBTS. Our study also reveals that the cause of JBTS has been elucidated in the great majority of our FC subjects (33/35 [94%] families), even though JBTS shows substantial locus and allelic heterogeneity in this population.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26477546 PMCID: PMC4667103 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2015.09.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025