| Literature DB >> 29656859 |
Claire Guissart1, Xenia Latypova2, Paul Rollier3, Tahir N Khan4, Hannah Stamberger5, Kirsty McWalter6, Megan T Cho6, Susanne Kjaergaard7, Sarah Weckhuysen5, Gaetan Lesca8, Thomas Besnard9, Katrin Õunap10, Lynn Schema11, Andreas G Chiocchetti12, Marie McDonald13, Julitta de Bellescize14, Marie Vincent9, Hilde Van Esch15, Shannon Sattler16, Irman Forghani17, Isabelle Thiffault18, Christine M Freitag12, Deborah Sara Barbouth17, Maxime Cadieux-Dion19, Rebecca Willaert6, Maria J Guillen Sacoto6, Nicole P Safina20, Christèle Dubourg21, Lauren Grote20, Wilfrid Carré21, Carol Saunders18, Sander Pajusalu10, Emily Farrow22, Anne Boland23, Danielle Hays Karlowicz13, Jean-François Deleuze23, Monica H Wojcik24, Rena Pressman17, Bertrand Isidor9, Annick Vogels15, Wim Van Paesschen25, Lihadh Al-Gazali26, Aisha Mohamed Al Shamsi27, Mireille Claustres1, Aurora Pujol28, Stephan J Sanders29, François Rivier30, Nicolas Leboucq31, Benjamin Cogné9, Souphatta Sasorith1, Damien Sanlaville8, Kyle Retterer6, Sylvie Odent32, Nicholas Katsanis4, Stéphane Bézieau9, Michel Koenig1, Erica E Davis33, Laurent Pasquier3, Sébastien Küry34.
Abstract
RORα, the RAR-related orphan nuclear receptor alpha, is essential for cerebellar development. The spontaneous mutant mouse staggerer, with an ataxic gait caused by neurodegeneration of cerebellar Purkinje cells, was discovered two decades ago to result from homozygous intragenic Rora deletions. However, RORA mutations were hitherto undocumented in humans. Through a multi-centric collaboration, we identified three copy-number variant deletions (two de novo and one dominantly inherited in three generations), one de novo disrupting duplication, and nine de novo point mutations (three truncating, one canonical splice site, and five missense mutations) involving RORA in 16 individuals from 13 families with variable neurodevelopmental delay and intellectual disability (ID)-associated autistic features, cerebellar ataxia, and epilepsy. Consistent with the human and mouse data, disruption of the D. rerio ortholog, roraa, causes significant reduction in the size of the developing cerebellum. Systematic in vivo complementation studies showed that, whereas wild-type human RORA mRNA could complement the cerebellar pathology, missense variants had two distinct pathogenic mechanisms of either haploinsufficiency or a dominant toxic effect according to their localization in the ligand-binding or DNA-binding domains, respectively. This dichotomous direction of effect is likely relevant to the phenotype in humans: individuals with loss-of-function variants leading to haploinsufficiency show ID with autistic features, while individuals with de novo dominant toxic variants present with ID, ataxia, and cerebellar atrophy. Our combined genetic and functional data highlight the complex mutational landscape at the human RORA locus and suggest that dual mutational effects likely determine phenotypic outcome.Entities:
Keywords: RORA; autistic features; cerebellar ataxia; dual molecular effects; epilepsy; intellectual disability; neurodevelopmental disorder
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29656859 PMCID: PMC5986661 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2018.02.021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025