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Heterozygous variants in MYH10 associated with neurodevelopmental disorders and congenital anomalies with evidence for primary cilia-dependent defects in Hedgehog signaling

Authors :
Alexander M. Holtz
Rachel VanCoillie
Elizabeth A. Vansickle
Deanna Alexis Carere
Kara Withrow
Erin Torti
Jane Juusola
Francisca Millan
Richard Person
Maria J. Guillen Sacoto
Yue Si
Ingrid M. Wentzensen
Jada Pugh
Georgia Vasileiou
Melissa Rieger
André Reis
Emanuela Argilli
Elliott H. Sherr
Kimberly A. Aldinger
William B. Dobyns
Theresa Brunet
Julia Hoefele
Matias Wagner
Benjamin Haber
Urania Kotzaeridou
Boris Keren
Delphine Heron
Cyril Mignot
Solveig Heide
Thomas Courtin
Julien Buratti
Serini Murugasen
Kirsten A. Donald
Emily O’Heir
Shade Moody
Katherine H. Kim
Barbara K. Burton
Grace Yoon
Miguel del Campo
Diane Masser-Frye
Mariya Kozenko
Christina Parkinson
Susan L. Sell
Patricia L. Gordon
Jeremy W. Prokop
Amel Karaa
Caleb Bupp
Benjamin A. Raby
Source :
Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics. 24(10)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Nonmuscle myosin II complexes are master regulators of actin dynamics that play essential roles during embryogenesis with vertebrates possessing 3 nonmuscle myosin II heavy chain genes, MYH9, MYH10, and MYH14. As opposed to MYH9 and MYH14, no recognizable disorder has been associated with MYH10. We sought to define the clinical characteristics and molecular mechanism of a novel autosomal dominant disorder related to MYH10.An international collaboration identified the patient cohort. CAS9-mediated knockout cell models were used to explore the mechanism of disease pathogenesis.We identified a cohort of 16 individuals with heterozygous MYH10 variants presenting with a broad spectrum of neurodevelopmental disorders and variable congenital anomalies that affect most organ systems and were recapitulated in animal models of altered MYH10 activity. Variants were typically de novo missense changes with clustering observed in the motor domain. MYH10 knockout cells showed defects in primary ciliogenesis and reduced ciliary length with impaired Hedgehog signaling. MYH10 variant overexpression produced a dominant-negative effect on ciliary length.These data presented a novel genetic cause of isolated and syndromic neurodevelopmental disorders related to heterozygous variants in the MYH10 gene with implications for disrupted primary cilia length control and altered Hedgehog signaling in disease pathogenesis.

Details

ISSN :
15300366
Volume :
24
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f6a263cfcf99f60d266a1ceffe04e67a