Back to Search Start Over

Haploinsufficiency of PRR12 causes a spectrum of neurodevelopmental, eye, and multisystem abnormalities

Authors :
Tugce B. Balci
Paul R. Mark
Sedlácek Z
Krista Sondergaard Schatz
Tadashi Kaname
Christiane Zweier
Hidenori Ohnishi
Ingrid M. Wentzensen
Solveig Heide
Weimin Bi
A. Baxova
Antje Wiesener
Nancy J. Cox
Devon Haynes
David Rodriguez-Buritica
Sarka Bendova
Nobuhiko Okamoto
Tomoko Uehara
Oana Caluseriu
Koichi Kawakami
Victoria Mok Siu
Alfredo Brusco
Boris Keren
Jennifer M. Lemons
David J. Amor
Patrick Rump
Marie T. McDonald
George E. Hoganson
Miroslava Hancarova
Gina M. Morley
Maria A. Magriña
Sarah Montgomery
Lei Wang
Seema R. Lalani
Kazuo Kubota
Mohammed Al-raqad
Patricia G Wheeler
Haley Streff
Fuad Chowdhury
Elisa Biamino
Meral Gunay-Aygun
Tawfiq Froukh
Kenjiro Kosaki
Jagdeep S. Walia
Source :
Paediatrics Publications, Genetics in Medicine, 23(7), 1234-1245. Nature Publishing Group
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Purpose: Proline Rich 12 (PRR12) is a gene of unknown function with suspected DNA-binding activity, expressed in developing mice and human brains. Predicted loss-of-function variants in this gene are extremely rare, indicating high intolerance of haploinsufficiency. Methods: Three individuals with intellectual disability and iris anomalies and truncating de novo PRR12 variants were described previously. We add 21 individuals with similar PRR12 variants identified via matchmaking platforms, bringing the total number to 24. Results: We observed 12 frameshift, 6 nonsense, 1 splice-site, and 2 missense variants and one patient with a gross deletion involving PRR12. Three individuals had additional genetic findings, possibly confounding the phenotype. All patients had developmental impairment. Variable structural eye defects were observed in 12/24 individuals (50%) including anophthalmia, microphthalmia, colobomas, optic nerve and iris abnormalities. Additional common features included hypotonia (61%), heart defects (52%), growth failure (54%), and kidney anomalies (35%). PrediXcan analysis showed that phecodes most strongly associated with reduced predicted PRR12 expression were enriched for eye- (7/30) and kidney- (4/30) phenotypes, such as wet macular degeneration and chronic kidney disease. Conclusion: These findings support PRR12 haploinsufficiency as a cause for a novel disorder with a wide clinical spectrum marked chiefly by neurodevelopmental and eye abnormalities. Graphic Abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]

Details

ISSN :
10983600
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genetics in Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0cc7d41479fd086aa1b57e144767789f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41436-021-01129-6