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Expanding the genetics and phenotypic spectrum of Lysine-specific demethylase 5C (KDM5C): a report of 13 novel variants

Authors :
Emanuela Leonardi
Maria Cristina Aspromonte
Denise Drongitis
Elisa Bettella
Lucia Verrillo
Roberta Polli
Meriel McEntagart
Laura Licchetta
Robertino Dilena
Stefano D’Arrigo
Claudia Ciaccio
Silvia Esposito
Vincenzo Leuzzi
Annalaura Torella
Demetrio Baldo
Fortunato Lonardo
Giulia Bonato
Serena Pellegrin
Franco Stanzial
Renata Posmyk
Ewa Kaczorowska
Miryam Carecchio
Monika Gos
Sylwia Rzońca-Niewczas
Maria Giuseppina Miano
Alessandra Murgia
Leonardi, Emanuela
Aspromonte, Maria Cristina
Drongitis, Denise
Bettella, Elisa
Verrillo, Lucia
Polli, Roberta
Mcentagart, Meriel
Licchetta, Laura
Dilena, Robertino
D'Arrigo, Stefano
Ciaccio, Claudia
Esposito, Silvia
Leuzzi, Vincenzo
Torella, Annalaura
Baldo, Demetrio
Lonardo, Fortunato
Bonato, Giulia
Pellegrin, Serena
Stanzial, Franco
Posmyk, Renata
Kaczorowska, Ewa
Carecchio, Miryam
Gos, Monika
Rzońca-Niewczas, Sylwia
Miano, Maria Giuseppina
Murgia, Alessandra
Source :
European Journal of Human Genetics. 31:202-215
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Lysine-specific demethylase 5C (KDM5C) has been identified as an important chromatin remodeling gene, contributing to X-linked neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs). The KDM5C gene, located in the Xp22 chromosomal region, encodes the H3K4me3-me2 eraser involved in neuronal plasticity and dendritic growth. Here we report 30 individuals carrying 13 novel and one previously identified KDM5C variants. Our cohort includes the first reported case of somatic mosaicism in a male carrying a KDM5C nucleotide substitution, and a dual molecular finding in a female carrying a homozygous truncating FUCA1 alteration together with a de novo KDM5C variant. With the use of next generation sequencing strategies, we detected 1 frameshift, 1 stop codon, 2 splice-site and 10 missense variants, which pathogenic role was carefully investigated by a thorough bioinformatic analysis. The pattern of X-chromosome inactivation was found to have an impact on KDM5C phenotypic expression in females of our cohort. The affected individuals of our case series manifested a neurodevelopmental condition characterized by psychomotor delay, intellectual disability with speech disorders, and behavioral features with particular disturbed sleep pattern; other observed clinical manifestations were short stature, obesity and hypertrichosis. Collectively, these findings expand the current knowledge about the pathogenic mechanisms leading to dysfunction of this important chromatin remodeling gene and contribute to a refinement of the KDM5C phenotypic spectrum.

Subjects

Subjects :
Genetics
Genetics (clinical)

Details

ISSN :
14765438 and 10184813
Volume :
31
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Human Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2175b81116c090cdd41775423141356e