A deep intronic DLG4 variant resulting in DLG4‐related synaptopathy

Author:

Levy Amanda M.1,Ganapathi Mythily2,Chung Wendy K.3,Tümer Zeynep14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Genetics, Kennedy Center Copenhagen University Hospital, Rigshospitalet Copenhagen Denmark

2. Department of Pathology & Cell Biology Columbia University Irving Medical Center New York City New York USA

3. Department of Pediatrics Columbia University Irving Medical Center New York City New York USA

4. Department of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

Abstract

AbstractThe rare autosomal dominant brain disorder DLG4‐related synaptopathy is caused by de novo variants in DLG4 (encoding PSD‐95), the majority of which are predicted to be protein‐truncating. In addition to splice site variants, a number of synonymous and missense DLG4 variants are predicted to exert their effect through altered RNA splicing, although the pathogenicity of these variants is uncertain without functional RNA studies. Here, we describe a young boy with a deep intronic DLG4 variant (c.2105+235C>T) identified using whole genome sequencing. By using reverse‐transcription PCR on RNA derived from peripheral blood, we demonstrate that DLG4 mRNA expression is detectable in blood and the deep intronic variant gives rise to two alternative DLG4 transcripts, one of which includes a pseudoexon. Both alternative transcripts are out‐of‐frame and predicted to result in protein‐truncation, thereby establishing the genetic diagnosis for the proband. This adds to the evidence concerning the pathogenic potential of deep intronic variants and underlines the importance of functional studies, even in cases where reported tissue‐specific gene expression might suggest otherwise.

Funder

Jascha Fonden

Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

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