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De Novo Variants in WDR37 Are Associated with Epilepsy, Colobomas, Dysmorphism, Developmental Delay, Intellectual Disability, and Cerebellar Hypoplasia.

Authors :
Kanca O
Andrews JC
Lee PT
Patel C
Braddock SR
Slavotinek AM
Cohen JS
Gubbels CS
Aldinger KA
Williams J
Indaram M
Fatemi A
Yu TW
Agrawal PB
Vezina G
Simons C
Crawford J
Lau CC
Chung WK
Markello TC
Dobyns WB
Adams DR
Gahl WA
Wangler MF
Yamamoto S
Bellen HJ
Malicdan MCV
Source :
American journal of human genetics [Am J Hum Genet] 2019 Aug 01; Vol. 105 (2), pp. 413-424. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Jul 18.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

WD40 repeat-containing proteins form a large family of proteins present in all eukaryotes. Here, we identified five pediatric probands with de novo variants in WDR37, which encodes a member of the WD40 repeat protein family. Two probands shared one variant and the others have variants in nearby amino acids outside the WD40 repeats. The probands exhibited shared phenotypes of epilepsy, colobomas, facial dysmorphology reminiscent of CHARGE syndrome, developmental delay and intellectual disability, and cerebellar hypoplasia. The WDR37 protein is highly conserved in vertebrate and invertebrate model organisms and is currently not associated with a human disease. We generated a null allele of the single Drosophila ortholog to gain functional insights and replaced the coding region of the fly gene CG12333/wdr37 with GAL4. These flies are homozygous viable but display severe bang sensitivity, a phenotype associated with seizures in flies. Additionally, the mutant flies fall when climbing the walls of the vials, suggesting a defect in grip strength, and repeat the cycle of climbing and falling. Similar to wall clinging defect, mutant males often lose grip of the female abdomen during copulation. These phenotypes are rescued by using the GAL4 in the CG12333/wdr37 locus to drive the UAS-human reference WDR37 cDNA. The two variants found in three human subjects failed to rescue these phenotypes, suggesting that these alleles severely affect the function of this protein. Taken together, our data suggest that variants in WDR37 underlie a novel syndromic neurological disorder.<br /> (Published by Elsevier Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1537-6605
Volume :
105
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
American journal of human genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31327508
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.06.014