| Literature DB >> 33048237 |
Ashfaque Ahmed1, Meng Wang1, Gaber Bergant2, Reza Maroofian3, Rongjuan Zhao1, Majid Alfadhel4,5,6, Marwan Nashabat4,6, Muhammad Talal AlRifai4,5, Wafaa Eyaid6,7,8, Abdulrahman Alswaid9, Christian Beetz10, Yan Qin11, Tengfei Zhu1, Qi Tian1, Lu Xia1, Huidan Wu1, Lu Shen1, Shanshan Dong1, Xinyi Yang1, Cenying Liu1, Linya Ma1, Qiumeng Zhang1, Rizwan Khan1, Abid Ali Shah1, Jifeng Guo11,12, Beisha Tang11,12, Lea Leonardis13,14, Karin Writzl3, Borut Peterlin3, Hui Guo1,15, Sajid Malik16, Kun Xia17,18,19, Zhengmao Hu20,21.
Abstract
We aimed to detect the causative gene in five unrelated families with recessive inheritance pattern neurological disorders involving the central nervous system, and the potential function of the NEMF gene in the central nervous system. Exome sequencing (ES) was applied to all families and linkage analysis was performed on family 1. A minigene assay was used to validate the splicing effect of the relevant discovered variants. Immunofluorescence (IF) experiment was performed to investigate the role of the causative gene in neuron development. The large consanguineous family confirms the phenotype-causative relationship with homozygous frameshift variant (NM_004713.6:c.2618del) as revealed by ES. Linkage analysis of the family showed a significant single-point LOD of 4.5 locus. Through collaboration in GeneMatcher, four additional unrelated families' likely pathogenic NEMF variants for a spectrum of central neurological disorders, two homozygous splice-site variants (NM_004713.6:c.574+1G>T and NM_004713.6:c.807-2A>C) and a homozygous frameshift variant (NM_004713.6: c.1234_1235insC) were subsequently identified and segregated with all affected individuals. We further revealed that knockdown (KD) of Nemf leads to impairment of axonal outgrowth and synapse development in cultured mouse primary cortical neurons. Our study demonstrates that disease-causing biallelic NEMF variants result in central nervous system impairment and other variable features. NEMF is an important player in mammalian neuron development.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33048237 DOI: 10.1007/s00439-020-02226-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genet ISSN: 0340-6717 Impact factor: 4.132