| Literature DB >> 30850703 |
Kriti D Khandelwal1, Marie-José H van den Boogaard2, Sarah L Mehrem3,4, Jakob Gebel5, Christina Fagerberg6, Ellen van Beusekom7, Ellen van Binsbergen2, Ozan Topaloglu8, Marloes Steehouwer9, Christian Gilissen9, Nina Ishorst3,4, Iris A L M van Rooij10, Nel Roeleveld10, Kaare Christensen6,11, Joseph Schoenaers12, Stefaan Bergé13, Jeffrey C Murray14, Greet Hens15, Koen Devriendt16, Kerstin U Ludwig3,4, Elisabeth Mangold4, Alexander Hoischen9,17, Huiqing Zhou8,9, Volker Dötsch5, Carine E L Carels18,19,20,21, Hans van Bokhoven22.
Abstract
We aimed to identify novel deletions and variants of TP63 associated with orofacial clefting (OFC). Copy number variants were assessed in three OFC families using microarray analysis. Subsequently, we analyzed TP63 in a cohort of 1072 individuals affected with OFC and 706 population-based controls using molecular inversion probes (MIPs). We identified partial deletions of TP63 in individuals from three families affected with OFC. In the OFC cohort, we identified several TP63 variants predicting to cause loss-of-function alleles, including a frameshift variant c.569_576del (p.(Ala190Aspfs*5)) and a nonsense variant c.997C>T (p.(Gln333*)) that introduces a premature stop codon in the DNA-binding domain. In addition, we identified the first missense variants in the oligomerization domain c.1213G>A (p.(Val405Met)), which occurred in individuals with OFC. This variant was shown to abrogate oligomerization of mutant p63 protein into oligomeric complexes, and therefore likely represents a loss-of-function allele rather than a dominant-negative. All of these variants were inherited from an unaffected parent, suggesting reduced penetrance of such loss-of-function alleles. Our data indicate that loss-of-function alleles in TP63 can also give rise to OFC as the main phenotype. We have uncovered the dosage-dependent functions of p63, which were previously rejected.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30850703 PMCID: PMC6777535 DOI: 10.1038/s41431-019-0370-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Hum Genet ISSN: 1018-4813 Impact factor: 4.246