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CDK10 Mutations in Humans and Mice Cause Severe Growth Retardation, Spine Malformations, and Developmental Delays

Authors :
Sudipto Roy
Noémi van Hul
Janine Altmüller
Hyungwon Choi
Nur'Ain Binte Ali
Xavier Bisteau
Shuhui Lim
Christian Windpassinger
Stéphane Blouin
Verena Rupp
Carine Bonnard
Franz Grill
Byrappa Venkatesh
Bruno Reversade
Rudolf Ganger
Vincenzo Coppola
S. Zakiah A. Talib
Klaus Klaushofer
Majid Alfadhel
Gökhan Yigit
Farid Ben Chehida
Paul Roschger
Ali Al Kaissi
Matias J. Caldez
Umut Altunoglu
Bernd Wollnik
Hülya Kayserili
Lionel Van Maldergem
Alvin Yu Jin Ng
Sameh A. Youssef
Lino Tessarollo
Katharina M. Roetzer
Hao Lu
Philipp Kaldis
Juliette Piard
Alain de Bruin
Sumanty Tohari
Karabey, Hülya Kayserili
Wollnik, Bernd
Kaldis, Philipp
Windpassinger, Christian
Piard, Juliette
Bonnard, Carine
Alfadhel, Majid
Lim, Shuhui
Bisteau, Xavier
Blouin, Stéphane
Ali, Nur'Ain B.
Ng, Alvin Yu Jin
Lu, Hao
Tohari, Sumanty
Talib, S. Zakiah A.
van Hul, Noémi
Caldez, Matias J.
Van Maldergem, Lionel
Yiğit, Gökhan
Youssef, Sameh A.
Coppola, Vincenzo
de Bruin, Alain
Tessarollo, Lino
Choi, Hyungwon
Rupp, Verena
Roetzer, Katharina
Roschger, Paul
Klaushofer, Klaus
Altmüller, Janine
Roy, Sudipto
Venkatesh, Byrappa
Ganger, Rudolf
Grill, Franz
Ben Chehida, Farid
Altunoglu, Umut
Al Kaissi, Ali
Reversade, Bruno
School of Medicine
Department of Medical Genetics
Regenerative Medicine, Stem Cells & Cancer
Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences
Amsterdam Reproduction & Development (AR&D)
Center for Reproductive Medicine
ACS - Heart failure & arrhythmias
ACS - Diabetes & metabolism
Source :
American Journal of Human Genetics, American journal of human genetics, 101(3), 391-403. Cell Press, American Journal of Human Genetics, 101(3), 391. Cell Press
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

In five separate families, we identified nine individuals affected by a previously unidentified syndrome characterized by growth retardation, spine malformation, facial dysmorphisms, and developmental delays. Using homozygosity mapping, array CGH, and exome sequencing, we uncovered bi-allelic loss-of-function CDK10 mutations segregating with this disease. CDK10 is a protein kinase that partners with cyclin M to phosphorylate substrates such as ETS2 and PKN2 in order to modulate cellular growth. To validate and model the pathogenicity of these CDK10 germline mutations, we generated conditional-knockout mice. Homozygous Cdk10-knockout mice died postnatally with severe growth retardation, skeletal defects, and kidney and lung abnormalities, symptoms that partly resemble the disease's effect in humans. Fibroblasts derived from affected individuals and Cdk10-knockout mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) proliferated normally; however, Cdk10-knockout MEFs developed longer cilia. Comparative transcriptomic analysis of mutant and wild-type mouse organs revealed lipid metabolic changes consistent with growth impairment and altered ciliogenesis in the absence of CDK10. Our results document the CDK10 loss-of-function phenotype and point to a function for CDK10 in transducing signals received at the primary cilia to sustain embryonic and postnatal development.<br />NIH, the National Cancer Institute; Center for Cancer Research; Strategic Positioning Fund for the Genetic Orphan Diseases program; Industry Alignment Fund for the Singapore Childhood Undiagnosed Diseases program from the A*STAR (Agency for Science, Technology, and Research) Biomedical Research Council; A*STAR Biomedical Research Council

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00029297
Volume :
101
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of human genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f40dd9590bfaaffdcbe2fe81c6b9ab32
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.08.003