| Literature DB >> 32499722 |
Babylakshmi Muthusamy1,2,3, Anikha Bellad1,2,3, Pramada Prasad4, Aravind K Bandari1,2,3, G Bhuvanalakshmi1, R M Kiragasur5, Satish Chandra Girimaj5, Akhilesh Pandey2,3,6,7.
Abstract
The large majority of cases with intellectual disability are syndromic (i.e. occur with other well-defined clinical phenotypes) and have been studied extensively. Autosomal recessive nonsyndromic intellectual disability is a group of genetically heterogeneous disorders for which a number of potentially causative genes have been identified although the molecular basis of most of them remains unexplored. Here, we report the clinical characteristics and genetic findings of a family with two male siblings affected with autosomal recessive nonsyndromic intellectual disability. Whole exome sequencing was carried out on two affected male siblings and unaffected parents. A potentially pathogenic variant identified in this study was confirmed by Sanger sequencing to be inherited in an autosomal recessive fashion. We identified a novel nonsense mutation (p.Gln368Ter) in the LINS1 gene which leads to loss of 389 amino acids in the C-terminus of the encoded protein. The truncation mutation causes a complete loss of LINES_C domain along with loss of three known phosphorylation sites and a known ubiquitylation site in addition to other evolutionarily conserved regions of LINS1. LINS1 has been reported to cause MRT27 (mental retardation, autosomal recessive 27), a rare autosomal recessive nonsyndromic intellectual disability, with limited characterization of the phenotype. Identification of a potentially pathogenic truncating mutation in LINS1 in two profoundly intellectually impaired patients also confirms its role in cognition.Entities:
Keywords: Embryogenesis; WNT signalling; autosomal recessive; genetic disorders; truncating mutation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32499722 PMCID: PMC7247441 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00354
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Figure 1Pedigree and LINS1 mutation. (A) Pedigree depicting affected and unaffected members of the proband's family. Whole exome sequencing was carried out in two affected siblings (IV-2 and IV-3) and unaffected parents (II-3 and III-3). (B) Schematic representation of LINS1 truncating mutation p.Gln358Ter at the genomic, cDNA, and protein levels. The location of the single nucleotide variant c.1102C > T at exon 5 in LINS1 gene that led to a premature stop of the protein product p.Gln368Ter is indicated by arrows (red). The wild type (1-757) and mutant protein product (1-367) of LINS1 is depicted. The truncated protein product shows the partial loss of LINES_N domain and complete loss of LINES_C domain and a ubiquitylation site Lys407. (C) Chromatograms depicting the Sanger sequencing results of a region spanning LINS1 mutation (g. 101113976G > A) in both the siblings (homozygous), unaffected mother (heterozygous), and unaffected father (heterozygous). The location at which mutation occurs is depicted by the arrow (red).
Phenotypic features of the two affected siblings compared with a previously reported family [Akawi et al. (19)].
| Features | Current study | Akawi et al. ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IV-2 | IV-3 | 1st child | 2nd child | |
| Age in years (current) | 20 | 18 | ||
| Age at initial clinical evaluation | 12 years | 8 years | 9 years | 3 years |
| Prenatal period | Pregnancy-induced hypertension | Pregnancy-induced hypertension and cervical incompetence | Mild hypertension and gestational diabetes | Uneventful |
| Labor | Assisted vaginal breech delivery | Normal vaginal delivery | Induced | Normal |
| Low birth weight | 1.8 kg | 2.0 kg | 3.0 kg | 3.0 kg |
| Seizures | No | Yes, Since 2 years of age | No | |
| Independent walking | 2 years | 3 years | 19 months | 20 months |
| Speaking 2 words | 10 years | 5 years | No speech | No speech |
| IQ/SQ | SQ=9 (12 years age) | SQ=16.6 (9 years) | No details | No details |
| Degree of intellectual disability | Severe | Profound | No details | No details |
| Autistic features | Yes | Yes | Absent | Absent |
| Hyperactivity | No | Yes | Yes | No details |
| Motor stereotypes | Yes | Yes | Yes | ?Yes |
| Facies | Coarse | Coarse | Flat mid face | Flat mid face |
| Long tapering Fingers | Yes | Yes | No details | No details |
| Weight | 26 kgs | 20 kgs | No details | No details |
Autosomal recessive mutations with <0.01 minor allele frequencies in 1,000 genomes project, ExAC, and gnomAD databases.
| Gene | Chromo some | Genomic mutation | mRNA change | Protein Change | Maximum of minor allele frequencies in databases |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chr15 | g. 101113976G > A | NM_001040616:exon5: c.C1102T | p.Gln368Ter | 0 | |
| Chr17 | g. 73500739C > T | NM_020753:exon12: c.G1228A | p.Val410Met | 0.0046 | |
| Chr17 | g. 79684843C > T | NM_001270953:exon9: c.C574T | p.Pro192Ser | 0.0065 | |
| Chr17 | g. 80426653C > T | NM_012336:exon4: c.C266T | p.Ser89Leu | 0.0021 | |
| Chr19 | g. 855624C > T | NM_001972:exon4: c.C427T | p.Arg143Cys | 0.0001 |
Figure 2Known mutations in LINS1 gene and depiction of conservation of the truncated region of LINS1 protein. (A) Depiction of currently known pathogenic mutations in LINS1. The mutations reported previously are shown as black circles and the mutation identified in this study is represented by a red circle. (B) MetaDome analysis of full length LINS1 protein depicting all possible tolerant, intolerant and neutral amino acids. The mutation identified in this study is depicted by a red arrow in the plot. The mutation is located in a moderately intolerant location notably, several moderately and highly intolerant sites are located downstream of the mutation reported in this study at position 368.