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De novo SOX6 variants cause a neurodevelopmental syndrome associated with ADHD, craniosynostosis, and osteochondromas

Authors :
M. Zarowiecki
A. Devereau
S.M. Wood
J. M. Boissiere
G. Elgar
Cara Forster
Liesbeth Keldermans
A. Sieghart
Allyn McConkie-Rosell
Augusto Rendon
S. R. Thompson
D. Polychronopoulos
Alexandre Arkader
Julien Thevenon
D. Kasperaviciute
Alma Kuechler
Bryan L. Krock
Dominique Martin-Coignard
Damian Smedley
T. Rahim
Barbara Mikat
Amber Begtrup
Priya Prasad
Lindsay B. Henderson
A. Stuckey
Mathilde Nizon
Tim Hubbard
I. U. S. Leong
M. Bleda
L. Lahnstein
C. E. H. Craig
Bertrand Isidor
Sarah Leigh
Joanne Mason
L. Moutsianas
T. Fowler
A. Siddiq
J. Pullinger
Marco Angelozzi
J. Ambrose
S. A. Watters
Saadet Mercimek-Andrews
K. Lawson
Claudia A. L. Ruivenkamp
Ian D. Krantz
J. E. Holman
Solveig Heide
Christel Depienne
Elizabeth T. DeChene
L. C. Daugherty
Alvaro Serrano Russi
Arianna Tucci
Mark J. Caulfield
Marie T. McDonald
Boris Keren
A. C. Need
Damara Ortiz
Nicola Foulds
William Spooner
Dara Tolchin
Eduardo Calpena
C. R. Boustred
Abdul Haseeb
Rudolf Gorazd
Charles Coutton
Alona Sosinsky
D. Perez-Gil
Sarah Stewart
J. M. Hackett
Giada Melistaccio
Andrew O.M. Wilkie
Radka Stoeva
Cédric Le Caignec
Pauline Le Tanno
Benjamin Cogné
Martina Mueller
Naghmeh Dorrani
Pedro Furió-Tarí
Gijs W. E. Santen
Hermann-Josef Lüdecke
Jessica P. Yeager
Julian A. Martinez-Agosto
Damien Haye
Kieran B. Pechter
Mohnish Suri
Livija Medne
M. J. Welland
Patrick Reed
K. Savage
G. C. Chan
Anne C.H. Tsai
F. Maleady-Crowe
A. de Burca
Ellen M. McDonagh
T. Rogers
F. Boardman-Pretty
Emily Lancaster
Katherine R. Smith
Christopher A. Odhams
Véronique Lefebvre
M. Ryten
Olivier Pichon
D. Halai
Aleš Maver
Christine Patch
R. E. Foulger
Frédéric Bilan
Helen Stevens
Hilde Van Esch
Eleanor Williams
Brigitte Gilbert-Dussardier
C. Tregidgo
K. Witkowska
F. J. Lopez
Gwenaël Le Guyader
Richard H Scott
M. Kayikci
Ellen Thomas
E. Walsh
Source :
American Journal of Human Genetics, 106(6), 830-845. CELL PRESS, Am J Hum Genet
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

SOX6 belongs to a family of 20 SRY-related HMG-box-containing (SOX) genes that encode transcription factors controlling cell fate and differentiation in many developmental and adult processes. For SOX6, these processes include, but are not limited to, neurogenesis and skeletogenesis. Variants in half of the SOX genes have been shown to cause severe developmental and adult syndromes, referred to as SOXopathies. We here provide evidence that SOX6 variants also cause a SOXopathy. Using clinical and genetic data, we identify 19 individuals harboring various types of SOX6 alterations and exhibiting developmental delay and/or intellectual disability; the individuals are from 17 unrelated families. Additional, inconstant features include attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), autism, mild facial dysmorphism, craniosynostosis, and multiple osteochondromas. All variants are heterozygous. Fourteen are de novo, one is inherited from a mosaic father, and four offspring from two families have a paternally inherited variant. Intragenic microdeletions, balanced structural rearrangements, frameshifts, and nonsense variants are predicted to inactivate the SOX6 variant allele. Four missense variants occur in residues and protein regions highly conserved evolutionarily. These variants are not detected in the gnomAD control cohort, and the amino acid substitutions are predicted to be damaging. Two of these variants are located in the HMG domain and abolish SOX6 transcriptional activity in vitro. No clear genotype-phenotype correlations are found. Taken together, these findings concur that SOX6 haploinsufficiency leads to a neurodevelopmental SOXopathy that often includes ADHD and abnormal skeletal and other features.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Human Genetics, 106(6), 830-845. CELL PRESS, Am J Hum Genet
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....25e4b2005e77addcf2aa011f8a987ba7