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De Novo Missense Variants in TRAF7 Cause Developmental Delay, Congenital Anomalies, and Dysmorphic Features

Authors :
Lynne A. Wolfe
Jill A. Rosenfeld
Julia Silver
Marco Sardiello
Andrea Hanson-Kahn
Yaping Yang
Danica Novacic
Yanjun Jiang
Stella Chen
Colleen E. Wahl
Dominyka Batkovskyte
Vipulkumar Patel
David Chitayat
Wenmiao Zhu
Neil A. Hanchard
Jonathan A. Bernstein
Yunru Shao
Xia Wang
Pilar L. Magoulas
Ronit Marom
Chun-An Chen
Brendan Lee
Caitlin L. Hale
Shirley Shuster
Pengfei Liu
Christian P. Schaaf
Mari Tokita
Louanne Hudgins
Ellen Macnamara
Amitha Ananth
Chester W. Brown
Christine M. Eng
Camilo Toro
Alberto di Ronza
Andrea M. Lewis
Cynthia J. Tifft
Source :
American journal of human genetics. 103(1)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

TRAF7 is a multi-functional protein involved in diverse signaling pathways and cellular processes. The phenotypic consequence of germline TRAF7 variants remains unclear. Here we report missense variants in TRAF7 in seven unrelated individuals referred for clinical exome sequencing. The seven individuals share substantial phenotypic overlap, with developmental delay, congenital heart defects, limb and digital anomalies, and dysmorphic features emerging as key unifying features. The identified variants are de novo in six individuals and comprise four distinct missense changes, including a c.1964G>A (p.Arg655Gln) variant that is recurrent in four individuals. These variants affect evolutionarily conserved amino acids and are located in key functional domains. Gene-specific mutation rate analysis showed that the occurrence of the de novo variants in TRAF7 (p = 2.6 × 10−3) and the recurrent de novo c.1964G>A (p.Arg655Gln) variant (p = 1.9 × 10−8) in our exome cohort was unlikely to have occurred by chance. In vitro analyses of the observed TRAF7 mutations showed reduced ERK1/2 phosphorylation. Our findings suggest that missense mutations in TRAF7 are associated with a multisystem disorder and provide evidence of a role for TRAF7 in human development.

Details

ISSN :
15376605
Volume :
103
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of human genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5e2b187a1bdc4ef08d95b7dcd691b192