| Literature DB >> 28132691 |
Sébastien Küry1, Thomas Besnard1, Frédéric Ebstein2, Tahir N Khan3, Tomasz Gambin4, Jessica Douglas5, Carlos A Bacino6, William J Craigen6, Stephan J Sanders7, Andrea Lehmann2, Xénia Latypova1, Kamal Khan3, Mathilde Pacault1, Stephanie Sacharow5, Kimberly Glaser8, Eric Bieth9, Laurence Perrin-Sabourin10, Marie-Line Jacquemont11, Megan T Cho12, Elizabeth Roeder13, Anne-Sophie Denommé-Pichon14, Kristin G Monaghan12, Bo Yuan6, Fan Xia6, Sylvain Simon15, Dominique Bonneau16, Philippe Parent17, Brigitte Gilbert-Dussardier18, Sylvie Odent19, Annick Toutain20, Laurent Pasquier19, Deborah Barbouth8, Chad A Shaw6, Ankita Patel6, Janice L Smith6, Weimin Bi6, Sébastien Schmitt1, Wallid Deb1, Mathilde Nizon1, Sandra Mercier1, Marie Vincent1, Caroline Rooryck21, Valérie Malan22, Ignacio Briceño23, Alberto Gómez23, Kimberly M Nugent24, James B Gibson25, Benjamin Cogné1, James R Lupski26, Holly A F Stessman27, Evan E Eichler28, Kyle Retterer12, Yaping Yang6, Richard Redon29, Nicholas Katsanis30, Jill A Rosenfeld31, Peter-Michael Kloetzel2, Christelle Golzio3, Stéphane Bézieau32, Paweł Stankiewicz33, Bertrand Isidor34.
Abstract
Degradation of proteins by the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) is an essential biological process in the development of eukaryotic organisms. Dysregulation of this mechanism leads to numerous human neurodegenerative or neurodevelopmental disorders. Through a multi-center collaboration, we identified six de novo genomic deletions and four de novo point mutations involving PSMD12, encoding the non-ATPase subunit PSMD12 (aka RPN5) of the 19S regulator of 26S proteasome complex, in unrelated individuals with intellectual disability, congenital malformations, ophthalmologic anomalies, feeding difficulties, deafness, and subtle dysmorphic facial features. We observed reduced PSMD12 levels and an accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins without any impairment of proteasome catalytic activity. Our PSMD12 loss-of-function zebrafish CRISPR/Cas9 model exhibited microcephaly, decreased convolution of the renal tubules, and abnormal craniofacial morphology. Our data support the biological importance of PSMD12 as a scaffolding subunit in proteasome function during development and neurogenesis in particular; they enable the definition of a neurodevelopmental disorder due to PSMD12 variants, expanding the phenotypic spectrum of UPS-dependent disorders.Entities:
Keywords: PSMD12; RPN5; intellectual disability; proteasome 26S; syndromic neurodevelopmental disorder; ubiquitin
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28132691 PMCID: PMC5294671 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.01.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025