| Literature DB >> 29198722 |
Elizabeth E Palmer1, Raman Kumar2, Christopher T Gordon3, Marie Shaw2, Laurence Hubert4, Renee Carroll2, Marlène Rio5, Lucinda Murray6, Melanie Leffler6, Tracy Dudding-Byth7, Myriam Oufadem3, Seema R Lalani8, Andrea M Lewis8, Fan Xia8, Allison Tam8, Richard Webster9, Susan Brammah10, Francesca Filippini3, John Pollard11, Judy Spies12, Andre E Minoche13, Mark J Cowley13, Sarah Risen14, Nina N Powell-Hamilton15, Jessica E Tusi15, LaDonna Immken16, Honey Nagakura16, Christine Bole-Feysot17, Patrick Nitschké18, Alexandrine Garrigue19, Geneviève de Saint Basile20, Emma Kivuva21, Richard H Scott22, Augusto Rendon23, Arnold Munnich24, William Newman25, Bronwyn Kerr25, Claude Besmond4, Jill A Rosenfeld8, Jeanne Amiel26, Michael Field27, Jozef Gecz28.
Abstract
A recurrent de novo missense variant within the C-terminal Sin3-like domain of ZSWIM6 was previously reported to cause acromelic frontonasal dysostosis (AFND), an autosomal-dominant severe frontonasal and limb malformation syndrome, associated with neurocognitive and motor delay, via a proposed gain-of-function effect. We present detailed phenotypic information on seven unrelated individuals with a recurrent de novo nonsense variant (c.2737C>T [p.Arg913Ter]) in the penultimate exon of ZSWIM6 who have severe-profound intellectual disability and additional central and peripheral nervous system symptoms but an absence of frontonasal or limb malformations. We show that the c.2737C>T variant does not trigger nonsense-mediated decay of the ZSWIM6 mRNA in affected individual-derived cells. This finding supports the existence of a truncated ZSWIM6 protein lacking the Sin3-like domain, which could have a dominant-negative effect. This study builds support for a key role for ZSWIM6 in neuronal development and function, in addition to its putative roles in limb and craniofacial development, and provides a striking example of different variants in the same gene leading to distinct phenotypes.Entities:
Keywords: ZSWIM6; autism; de novo; epilepsy; exome sequencing; genomics; intellectual disability; nonsense-mediated decay; recurrent; ubiquitination
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29198722 PMCID: PMC5812890 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.10.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025