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De Novo Variants Disrupting the HX Repeat Motif of ATN1 Cause a Recognizable Non-Progressive Neurocognitive Syndrome

Authors :
Tejaswi Kandula
Maria J. Guillen Sacoto
Mais Hashem
Saima Kayani
André E. Minoche
Edwin P. Kirk
Łukasz Jaremko
Heba M. Jalal Ahmed
Marwan Shinawi
Elizabeth E. Palmer
Christel Thauvin
Molly Snyder
Mark J. Cowley
Muddathir H Hamad
Maria Mercedes Villanueva
Seungbeom Hong
Fatema Al Zahrani
Laurence Faivre
Suliat F. Yakubu
Ann M. E. Bye
Velimir Gayevskiy
Megan T. Cho
Jasmeen S. Merzaban
Marisa V. Andrews
Alexander P. Drew
Ruth E. Bristol
Jill A. Rosenfeld
Stefan T. Arold
Lindsay B. Henderson
Antonio Vitobello
Tony Roscioli
Clare Puttick
Mariusz Jaremko
Rui Xiao
Fajr A. Aleisa
Amber Begtrup
Marilyn C. Jones
Fowzan S. Alkuraya
Rebecca Macintosh
Marcel E. Dinger
Kristin Lindstrom
Rani Sachdev
Angeles Schteinschnaider
Source :
American journal of human genetics, vol 104, iss 3
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2019.

Abstract

Polyglutamine expansions in the transcriptional co-repressor Atrophin-1, encoded by ATN1, cause the neurodegenerative condition dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA) via a proposed novel toxic gain of function. We present detailed phenotypic information on eight unrelated individuals who have de novo missense and insertion variants within a conserved 16-amino-acid "HX repeat" motif of ATN1. Each of the affected individuals has severe cognitive impairment and hypotonia, a recognizable facial gestalt, and variable congenital anomalies. However, they lack the progressive symptoms typical of DRPLA neurodegeneration. To distinguish this subset of affected individuals from the DRPLA diagnosis, we suggest using the term CHEDDA (congenital hypotonia, epilepsy, developmental delay, digit abnormalities) to classify the condition. CHEDDA-related variants alter the particular structural features of the HX repeat motif, suggesting that CHEDDA results from perturbation of the structural and functional integrity of the HX repeat. We found several non-homologous human genes containing similar motifs of eight to 10 HX repeat sequences, including RERE, where disruptive variants in this motif have also been linked to a separate condition that causes neurocognitive and congenital anomalies. These findings suggest that perturbation of the HX motif might explain other Mendelian human conditions.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of human genetics, vol 104, iss 3
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....db127783b1fb1ce2a655ab86e5d0fed4