| Literature DB >> 30580808 |
Keren Machol1, Justine Rousseau2, Sophie Ehresmann2, Thomas Garcia2, Thi Tuyet Mai Nguyen2, Rebecca C Spillmann3, Jennifer A Sullivan3, Vandana Shashi3, Yong-Hui Jiang4, Nicholas Stong5, Elise Fiala6, Marcia Willing6, Rolph Pfundt7, Tjitske Kleefstra7, Megan T Cho8, Heather McLaughlin8, Monica Rosello Piera9, Carmen Orellana9, Francisco Martínez9, Alfonso Caro-Llopis9, Sandra Monfort9, Tony Roscioli10, Cheng Yee Nixon11, Michael F Buckley12, Anne Turner13, Wendy D Jones14, Peter M van Hasselt15, Floris C Hofstede15, Koen L I van Gassen15, Alice S Brooks16, Marjon A van Slegtenhorst16, Katherine Lachlan17, Jessica Sebastian18, Suneeta Madan-Khetarpal18, Desai Sonal19, Naidu Sakkubai19, Julien Thevenon20, Laurence Faivre20, Alice Maurel20, Slavé Petrovski21, Ian D Krantz22, Jennifer M Tarpinian22, Jill A Rosenfeld1, Brendan H Lee1, Philippe M Campeau23.
Abstract
SMARCC2 (BAF170) is one of the invariable core subunits of the ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling BAF (BRG1-associated factor) complex and plays a crucial role in embryogenesis and corticogenesis. Pathogenic variants in genes encoding other components of the BAF complex have been associated with intellectual disability syndromes. Despite its significant biological role, variants in SMARCC2 have not been directly associated with human disease previously. Using whole-exome sequencing and a web-based gene-matching program, we identified 15 individuals with variable degrees of neurodevelopmental delay and growth retardation harboring one of 13 heterozygous variants in SMARCC2, most of them novel and proven de novo. The clinical presentation overlaps with intellectual disability syndromes associated with other BAF subunits, such as Coffin-Siris and Nicolaides-Baraitser syndromes and includes prominent speech impairment, hypotonia, feeding difficulties, behavioral abnormalities, and dysmorphic features such as hypertrichosis, thick eyebrows, thin upper lip vermilion, and upturned nose. Nine out of the fifteen individuals harbor variants in the highly conserved SMARCC2 DNA-interacting domains (SANT and SWIRM) and present with a more severe phenotype. Two of these individuals present cardiac abnormalities. Transcriptomic analysis of fibroblasts from affected individuals highlights a group of differentially expressed genes with possible roles in regulation of neuronal development and function, namely H19, SCRG1, RELN, and CACNB4. Our findings suggest a novel SMARCC2-related syndrome that overlaps with neurodevelopmental disorders associated with variants in BAF-complex subunits.Entities:
Keywords: Bafopathy; developmental delay; dysmorphisms; genotype-phenotype correlation; intellectual disability; neurodevelopmental disorder; speech delay; transcriptome
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30580808 PMCID: PMC6323608 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2018.11.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025