| Literature DB >> 31256877 |
Ingrid Paine1, Jennifer E Posey1, Christopher M Grochowski1, Shalini N Jhangiani2, Sarah Rosenheck3, Robert Kleyner3, Taylor Marmorale3, Margaret Yoon3, Kai Wang4, Reid Robison5, Gerarda Cappuccio6, Michele Pinelli6, Adriano Magli7, Zeynep Coban Akdemir1, Joannie Hui8, Wai Lan Yeung9, Bibiana K Y Wong10, Lucia Ortega11, Mir Reza Bekheirnia12, Tatjana Bierhals13, Maja Hempel13, Jessika Johannsen14, René Santer14, Dilek Aktas15, Mehmet Alikasifoglu15, Sevcan Bozdogan16, Hatip Aydin17, Ender Karaca18, Yavuz Bayram19, Hadas Ityel20, Michael Dorschner21, Janson J White22, Ekkehard Wilichowski23, Saskia B Wortmann24, Erasmo B Casella25, Joao Paulo Kitajima26, Fernando Kok27, Fabiola Monteiro26, Donna M Muzny28, Michael Bamshad29, Richard A Gibbs28, V Reid Sutton1, Hilde Van Esch30, Nicola Brunetti-Pierri6, Friedhelm Hildebrandt20, Ariel Brautbar11, Ignatia B Van den Veyver31, Ian Glass32, Davor Lessel13, Gholson J Lyon33, James R Lupski34.
Abstract
Members of a paralogous gene family in which variation in one gene is known to cause disease are eight times more likely to also be associated with human disease. Recent studies have elucidated DHX30 and DDX3X as genes for which pathogenic variant alleles are involved in neurodevelopmental disorders. We hypothesized that variants in paralogous genes encoding members of the DExD/H-box RNA helicase superfamily might also underlie developmental delay and/or intellectual disability (DD and/or ID) disease phenotypes. Here we describe 15 unrelated individuals who have DD and/or ID, central nervous system (CNS) dysfunction, vertebral anomalies, and dysmorphic features and were found to have probably damaging variants in DExD/H-box RNA helicase genes. In addition, these individuals exhibit a variety of other tissue and organ system involvement including ocular, outer ear, hearing, cardiac, and kidney tissues. Five individuals with homozygous (one), compound-heterozygous (two), or de novo (two) missense variants in DHX37 were identified by exome sequencing. We identified ten total individuals with missense variants in three other DDX/DHX paralogs: DHX16 (four individuals), DDX54 (three individuals), and DHX34 (three individuals). Most identified variants are rare, predicted to be damaging, and occur at conserved amino acid residues. Taken together, these 15 individuals implicate the DExD/H-box helicases in both dominantly and recessively inherited neurodevelopmental phenotypes and highlight the potential for more than one disease mechanism underlying these disorders.Entities:
Keywords: DExD/H-box RNA helicase family; developmental delay; human paralogs; intellectual disability
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31256877 PMCID: PMC6698803 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.06.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025