| Literature DB >> 31928709 |
David B Beck1, Ana Petracovici2, Chongsheng He3, Hannah W Moore4, Raymond J Louie4, Muhammad Ansar5, Sofia Douzgou6, Sivagamy Sithambaram7, Trudie Cottrell7, Regie Lyn P Santos-Cortez8, Eloise J Prijoles4, Renee Bend4, Boris Keren9, Cyril Mignot10, Marie-Christine Nougues11, Katrin Õunap12, Tiia Reimand13, Sander Pajusalu14, Muhammad Zahid5, Muhammad Arif Nadeem Saqib15, Julien Buratti9, Eleanor G Seaby16, Kirsty McWalter17, Aida Telegrafi17, Dustin Baldridge18, Marwan Shinawi18, Suzanne M Leal19, G Bradley Schaefer20, Roger E Stevenson4, Siddharth Banka6, Roberto Bonasio21, Jill A Fahrner22.
Abstract
Germline pathogenic variants in chromatin-modifying enzymes are a common cause of pediatric developmental disorders. These enzymes catalyze reactions that regulate epigenetic inheritance via histone post-translational modifications and DNA methylation. Cytosine methylation (5-methylcytosine [5mC]) of DNA is the quintessential epigenetic mark, yet no human Mendelian disorder of DNA demethylation has yet been delineated. Here, we describe in detail a Mendelian disorder caused by the disruption of DNA demethylation. TET3 is a methylcytosine dioxygenase that initiates DNA demethylation during early zygote formation, embryogenesis, and neuronal differentiation and is intolerant to haploinsufficiency in mice and humans. We identify and characterize 11 cases of human TET3 deficiency in eight families with the common phenotypic features of intellectual disability and/or global developmental delay; hypotonia; autistic traits; movement disorders; growth abnormalities; and facial dysmorphism. Mono-allelic frameshift and nonsense variants in TET3 occur throughout the coding region. Mono-allelic and bi-allelic missense variants localize to conserved residues; all but one such variant occur within the catalytic domain, and most display hypomorphic function in an assay of catalytic activity. TET3 deficiency and other Mendelian disorders of the epigenetic machinery show substantial phenotypic overlap, including features of intellectual disability and abnormal growth, underscoring shared disease mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: 5-hydroxymethylcytosine; 5-methylcytosine; DNA methylation; TET; epigenetic; genetic; intellectual disability
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Year: 2020 PMID: 31928709 PMCID: PMC7010978 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.12.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025