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Mutations in the DNA methyltransferase gene, DNMT3A, cause an overgrowth syndrome with intellectual disability

Authors :
Rob L. M. van Montfort
Naomi Yachelevich
Angelo Selicorni
Lise Aksglaede
Daniela T. Pilz
I. Karen Temple
Tabib Dabir
Nazneen Rahman
Blanca Gener
Katrina Tatton-Brown
Eleanor M. O’Brien
Diana Baralle
Elise Ruark
Ajith Kumar
David Goudie
Emma Ramsay
Sheila Seal
Anna Zachariou
Jenny E. Harmer
Silvana Del Vecchio Duarte
Tessa Homfray
Sandra Hanks
Lionel Van Maldergem
Source :
Nature genetics
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Overgrowth disorders are a heterogeneous group of conditions characterized by increased growth parameters and other variable clinical features such as intellectual disability and facial dysmorphism1. To identify new causes of human overgrowth, we performed exome sequencing in ten proband-parent trios and detected two de novo DNMT3A mutations. We identified 11 additional de novo mutations by sequencing DNMT3A in a further 142 individuals with overgrowth. The mutations alter residues in functional DNMT3A domains, and protein modeling suggests that they interfere with domain-domain interactions and histone binding. Similar mutations were not present in 1,000 UK population controls (13/152 cases versus 0/1,000 controls; P < 0.0001). Mutation carriers had a distinctive facial appearance, intellectual disability and greater height. DNMT3A encodes a DNA methyltransferase essential for establishing methylation during embryogenesis and is commonly somatically mutated in acute myeloid leukemia2, 3, 4. Thus, DNMT3A joins an emerging group of epigenetic DNA- and histone-modifying genes associated with both developmental growth disorders and hematological malignancies

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15461718 and 10614036
Volume :
46
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....244ad350eecd724b6189d75c9fadfda7