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WACloss-of-function mutations cause a recognisable syndrome characterised by dysmorphic features, developmental delay and hypotonia and recapitulate 10p11.23 microdeletion syndrome

Authors :
Jonathan N. Dodd
Marwan Shinawi
Katherine L. Helbig
Arelis Martir-Negron
Linda Manwaring
Audrey Schroeder
Gabriel C. Araujo
Cori DeSanto
Jane Juusola
Ddd Study
Bethany Friedman
Vivian Pan
Nora Shannon
Rhonda E. Schnur
Zhiyv Niu
April Rahrig
Kristin G. Monaghan
Patrik Vitazka
Hilary J. Vernon
Kristin D'Aco
Sha Tang
Source :
Journal of Medical Genetics. 52:754-761
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
BMJ, 2015.

Abstract

Background Rare de novo mutations have been implicated as a significant cause of idiopathic intellectual disability. Large deletions encompassing 10p11.23 have been implicated in developmental delay, behavioural abnormalities and dysmorphic features, but the genotype–phenotype correlation was not delineated. Mutations in WAC have been recently reported in large screening cohorts of patients with intellectual disability or autism, but no full phenotypic characterisation was described. Methods Clinical and molecular characterisation of six patients with loss-of-function WAC mutations identified by whole exome sequencing was performed. Clinical data were obtained by retrospective chart review, parental interviews, direct patient interaction and formal neuropsychological evaluation. Results Five heterozygous de novo WAC mutations were identified in six patients. Three of the mutations were nonsense, and two were frameshift; all are predicted to cause loss of function either through nonsense-mediated mRNA decay or protein truncation. Clinical findings included developmental delay (6/6), hypotonia (6/6), behavioural problems (5/6), eye abnormalities (5/6), constipation (5/6), feeding difficulties (4/6), seizures (2/6) and sleep problems (2/6). All patients exhibited common dysmorphic features, including broad/prominent forehead, synophrys and/or bushy eyebrows, depressed nasal bridge and bulbous nasal tip. Posteriorly rotated ears, hirsutism, deep-set eyes, thin upper lip, inverted nipples, hearing loss and branchial cleft anomalies were also noted. Conclusions Our case series show that loss-of-function mutations in WAC cause a recognisable genetic syndrome characterised by a neurocognitive phenotype and facial dysmorphism. Our data highly suggest that WAC haploinsufficiency is responsible for most of the phenotypic features associated with deletions encompassing 10p11.23.

Details

ISSN :
14686244 and 00222593
Volume :
52
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Medical Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0c9a3381c15f14541216f3710f056a82