| Literature DB >> 31031012 |
Scott Bell1, Justine Rousseau2, Huashan Peng1, Zahia Aouabed1, Pierre Priam3, Jean-Francois Theroux1, Malvin Jefri1, Arnaud Tanti1, Hanrong Wu1, Ilaria Kolobova1, Heika Silviera1, Karla Manzano-Vargas1, Sophie Ehresmann2, Fadi F Hamdan2, Nuwan Hettige1, Xin Zhang1, Lilit Antonyan1, Christina Nassif2, Lina Ghaloul-Gonzalez4, Jessica Sebastian4, Jerry Vockley4, Amber G Begtrup5, Ingrid M Wentzensen5, Amy Crunk5, Robert D Nicholls4, Kristin C Herman6, Joshua L Deignan7, Walla Al-Hertani8, Stephanie Efthymiou9, Vincenzo Salpietro9, Noriko Miyake10, Yoshio Makita11, Naomichi Matsumoto10, Rune Østern12, Gunnar Houge13, Maria Hafström12, Emily Fassi14, Henry Houlden9, Jolien S Klein Wassink-Ruiter15, Dominic Nelson16, Amy Goldstein17, Tabib Dabir18, Julien van Gils19, Thomas Bourgeron19, Richard Delorme20, Gregory M Cooper21, Jose E Martinez22, Candice R Finnila21, Lionel Carmant22, Anne Lortie23, Renske Oegema24, Koen van Gassen24, Sarju G Mehta25, Dagmar Huhle25, Rami Abou Jamra26, Sonja Martin26, Han G Brunner27, Dick Lindhout28, Margaret Au29, John M Graham29, Christine Coubes30, Gustavo Turecki1, Simon Gravel15, Naguib Mechawar1, Elsa Rossignol2, Jacques L Michaud2, Julie Lessard3, Carl Ernst31, Philippe M Campeau32.
Abstract
We identified individuals with variations in ACTL6B, a component of the chromatin remodeling machinery including the BAF complex. Ten individuals harbored bi-allelic mutations and presented with global developmental delay, epileptic encephalopathy, and spasticity, and ten individuals with de novo heterozygous mutations displayed intellectual disability, ambulation deficits, severe language impairment, hypotonia, Rett-like stereotypies, and minor facial dysmorphisms (wide mouth, diastema, bulbous nose). Nine of these ten unrelated individuals had the identical de novo c.1027G>A (p.Gly343Arg) mutation. Human-derived neurons were generated that recaptured ACTL6B expression patterns in development from progenitor cell to post-mitotic neuron, validating the use of this model. Engineered knock-out of ACTL6B in wild-type human neurons resulted in profound deficits in dendrite development, a result recapitulated in two individuals with different bi-allelic mutations, and reversed on clonal genetic repair or exogenous expression of ACTL6B. Whole-transcriptome analyses and whole-genomic profiling of the BAF complex in wild-type and bi-allelic mutant ACTL6B neural progenitor cells and neurons revealed increased genomic binding of the BAF complex in ACTL6B mutants, with corresponding transcriptional changes in several genes including TPPP and FSCN1, suggesting that altered regulation of some cytoskeletal genes contribute to altered dendrite development. Assessment of bi-alleic and heterozygous ACTL6B mutations on an ACTL6B knock-out human background demonstrated that bi-allelic mutations mimic engineered deletion deficits while heterozygous mutations do not, suggesting that the former are loss of function and the latter are gain of function. These results reveal a role for ACTL6B in neurodevelopment and implicate another component of chromatin remodeling machinery in brain disease.Entities:
Keywords: ACTL6B; genetic engineering; intellectual disability; neurodevelopment; seizure; stem cells
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31031012 PMCID: PMC6507050 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.03.022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025