| Literature DB >> 31646703 |
Hanyin Cheng1, Simona Capponi2,3, Emma Wakeling4, Elaine Marchi5, Quan Li6, Mengge Zhao7, Chunhua Weng8, Piatek G Stefan9, Helena Ahlfors9, Robert Kleyner10, Alan Rope11,12, Aimé Lumaka13,14,15, Prosper Lukusa14,15,16, Koenraad Devriendt16, Joris Vermeesch16, Jennifer E Posey1, Elizabeth E Palmer17,18, Lucinda Murray17, Eyby Leon19, Jullianne Diaz19, Lisa Worgan20, Amalia Mallawaarachchi20, Julie Vogt21, Sonja A de Munnik22, Lauren Dreyer23, Gareth Baynam23,24,25,26,27, Lisa Ewans28, Zornitza Stark29,30,31, Sebastian Lunke29,30,31, Ana R Gonçalves32, Gabriela Soares32, Jorge Oliveira32,33, Emily Fassi34, Marcia Willing34, Jeff L Waugh35,36, Laurence Faivre37, Jean-Baptiste Riviere37, Sebastien Moutton37,38, Shehla Mohammed39, Katelyn Payne40, Laurence Walsh40, Amber Begtrup41, Maria J Guillen Sacoto41, Ganka Douglas41, Nora Alexander41, Michael F Buckley42, Paul R Mark43, Lesley C Adès44,45, Sarah A Sandaradura44,45, James R Lupski1,46,47,48, Tony Roscioli49,42,50, Pankaj B Agrawal51, Antonie D Kline52, Kai Wang7,53, H T Marc Timmers2,3, Gholson J Lyon5,10,54.
Abstract
We recently described a new neurodevelopmental syndrome (TAF1/MRXS33 intellectual disability syndrome) (MIM# 300966) caused by pathogenic variants involving the X-linked gene TAF1, which participates in RNA polymerase II transcription. The initial study reported eleven families, and the syndrome was defined as presenting early in life with hypotonia, facial dysmorphia, and developmental delay that evolved into intellectual disability (ID) and/or autism spectrum disorder (ASD). We have now identified an additional 27 families through a genotype-first approach. Familial segregation analysis, clinical phenotyping, and bioinformatics were capitalized on to assess potential variant pathogenicity, and molecular modelling was performed for those variants falling within structurally characterized domains of TAF1. A novel phenotypic clustering approach was also applied, in which the phenotypes of affected individuals were classified using 51 standardized Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO) terms. Phenotypes associated with TAF1 variants show considerable pleiotropy and clinical variability, but prominent among previously unreported effects were brain morphological abnormalities, seizures, hearing loss, and heart malformations. Our allelic series broadens the phenotypic spectrum of TAF1/MRXS33 intellectual disability syndrome and the range of TAF1 molecular defects in humans. It also illustrates the challenges for determining the pathogenicity of inherited missense variants, particularly for genes mapping to chromosome X. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Cornelia de Lange; MRXS33 intellectual disability syndrome; TAF1; exome sequencing; transcriptomopathy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31646703 PMCID: PMC7187541 DOI: 10.1002/humu.23936
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.878