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Disruption of RFX family transcription factors causes autism, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, intellectual disability, and dysregulated behavior.

Authors :
Harris HK
Nakayama T
Lai J
Zhao B
Argyrou N
Gubbels CS
Soucy A
Genetti CA
Suslovitch V
Rodan LH
Tiller GE
Lesca G
Gripp KW
Asadollahi R
Hamosh A
Applegate CD
Turnpenny PD
Simon MEH
Volker-Touw CML
Gassen KLIV
Binsbergen EV
Pfundt R
Gardeitchik T
Vries BBA
Immken LL
Buchanan C
Willing M
Toler TL
Fassi E
Baker L
Vansenne F
Wang X
Ambrus JL Jr
Fannemel M
Posey JE
Agolini E
Novelli A
Rauch A
Boonsawat P
Fagerberg CR
Larsen MJ
Kibaek M
Labalme A
Poisson A
Payne KK
Walsh LE
Aldinger KA
Balciuniene J
Skraban C
Gray C
Murrell J
Bupp CP
Pascolini G
Grammatico P
Broly M
Küry S
Nizon M
Rasool IG
Zahoor MY
Kraus C
Reis A
Iqbal M
Uguen K
Audebert-Bellanger S
Ferec C
Redon S
Baker J
Wu Y
Zampino G
Syrbe S
Brosse I
Jamra RA
Dobyns WB
Cohen LL
Blomhoff A
Mignot C
Keren B
Courtin T
Agrawal PB
Beggs AH
Yu TW
Source :
Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics [Genet Med] 2021 Jun; Vol. 23 (6), pp. 1028-1040. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Mar 03.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Purpose: We describe a novel neurobehavioral phenotype of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), intellectual disability, and/or attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) associated with de novo or inherited deleterious variants in members of the RFX family of genes. RFX genes are evolutionarily conserved transcription factors that act as master regulators of central nervous system development and ciliogenesis.<br />Methods: We assembled a cohort of 38 individuals (from 33 unrelated families) with de novo variants in RFX3, RFX4, and RFX7. We describe their common clinical phenotypes and present bioinformatic analyses of expression patterns and downstream targets of these genes as they relate to other neurodevelopmental risk genes.<br />Results: These individuals share neurobehavioral features including ASD, intellectual disability, and/or ADHD; other frequent features include hypersensitivity to sensory stimuli and sleep problems. RFX3, RFX4, and RFX7 are strongly expressed in developing and adult human brain, and X-box binding motifs as well as RFX ChIP-seq peaks are enriched in the cis-regulatory regions of known ASD risk genes.<br />Conclusion: These results establish a likely role of deleterious variation in RFX3, RFX4, and RFX7 in cases of monogenic intellectual disability, ADHD and ASD, and position these genes as potentially critical transcriptional regulators of neurobiological pathways associated with neurodevelopmental disease pathogenesis.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1530-0366
Volume :
23
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33658631
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41436-021-01114-z