| Literature DB >> 33811806 |
Xenia Latypova1, Marie Vincent2, Alice Mollé3, Oluwadamilare A Adebambo4, Cynthia Fourgeux3, Tahir N Khan5, Alfonso Caro6, Monica Rosello6, Carmen Orellana6, Dmitriy Niyazov7, Damien Lederer8, Marie Deprez9, Yline Capri10, Peter Kannu11, Anne Claude Tabet12, Jonathan Levy12, Emmelien Aten13, Nicolette den Hollander13, Miranda Splitt14, Jagdeep Walia15, Ladonna L Immken16, Pawel Stankiewicz17, Kirsty McWalter18, Sharon Suchy18, Raymond J Louie19, Shannon Bell19, Roger E Stevenson19, Justine Rousseau20, Catherine Willem21, Christelle Retiere22, Xiang-Jiao Yang23, Philippe M Campeau20, Francisco Martinez6, Jill A Rosenfeld17, Cédric Le Caignec2, Sébastien Küry2, Sandra Mercier2, Kamran Moradkhani24, Solène Conrad24, Thomas Besnard2, Benjamin Cogné2, Nicholas Katsanis25, Stéphane Bézieau2, Jeremie Poschmann26, Erica E Davis27, Bertrand Isidor28.
Abstract
Proteins involved in transcriptional regulation harbor a demonstrated enrichment of mutations in neurodevelopmental disorders. The Sin3 (Swi-independent 3)/histone deacetylase (HDAC) complex plays a central role in histone deacetylation and transcriptional repression. Among the two vertebrate paralogs encoding the Sin3 complex, SIN3A variants cause syndromic intellectual disability, but the clinical consequences of SIN3B haploinsufficiency in humans are uncharacterized. Here, we describe a syndrome hallmarked by intellectual disability, developmental delay, and dysmorphic facial features with variably penetrant autism spectrum disorder, congenital malformations, corpus callosum defects, and impaired growth caused by disruptive SIN3B variants. Using chromosomal microarray or exome sequencing, and through international data sharing efforts, we identified nine individuals with heterozygous SIN3B deletion or single-nucleotide variants. Five individuals harbor heterozygous deletions encompassing SIN3B that reside within a ∼230 kb minimal region of overlap on 19p13.11, two individuals have a rare nonsynonymous substitution, and two individuals have a single-nucleotide deletion that results in a frameshift and predicted premature termination codon. To test the relevance of SIN3B impairment to measurable aspects of the human phenotype, we disrupted the orthologous zebrafish locus by genome editing and transient suppression. The mutant and morphant larvae display altered craniofacial patterning, commissural axon defects, and reduced body length supportive of an essential role for Sin3 function in growth and patterning of anterior structures. To investigate further the molecular consequences of SIN3B variants, we quantified genome-wide enhancer and promoter activity states by using H3K27ac ChIP-seq. We show that, similar to SIN3A mutations, SIN3B disruption causes hyperacetylation of a subset of enhancers and promoters in peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Together, these data demonstrate that SIN3B haploinsufficiency leads to a hitherto unknown intellectual disability/autism syndrome, uncover a crucial role of SIN3B in the central nervous system, and define the epigenetic landscape associated with Sin3 complex impairment.Entities:
Keywords: HDAC; SIN3A; SINB; acetylation; autism; epigenetics; intellectual disability; mutation; transcription; zebrafish
Year: 2021 PMID: 33811806 PMCID: PMC8206166 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2021.03.017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025