Genotype-Phenotype Comparison in POGZ-Related Neurodevelopmental Disorders by Using Clinical Scoring

Author:

Nagy DóraORCID,Verheyen Sarah,Wigby Kristen M.,Borovikov ArtemORCID,Sharkov ArtemORCID,Slegesky Valerie,Larson Austin,Fagerberg ChristinaORCID,Brasch-Andersen CharlotteORCID,Kibæk Maria,Bader Ingrid,Hernan Rebecca,High Frances A.,Chung Wendy K.ORCID,Schieving Jolanda H.,Behunova Jana,Smogavec Mateja,Laccone Franco,Witsch-Baumgartner MartinaORCID,Zobel Joachim,Duba Hans-Christoph,Weis Denisa

Abstract

POGZ-related disorders (also known as White-Sutton syndrome) encompass a wide range of neurocognitive abnormalities and other accompanying anomalies. Disease severity varies widely among POGZ patients and studies investigating genotype-phenotype association are scarce. Therefore, our aim was to collect data on previously unreported POGZ patients and perform a large-scale phenotype-genotype comparison from published data. Overall, 117 POGZ patients’ genotype and phenotype data were included in the analysis, including 12 novel patients. A severity scoring system was developed for the comparison. Mild and severe phenotypes were compared with the types and location of the variants and the predicted presence or absence of nonsense-mediated RNA decay (NMD). Missense variants were more often associated with mild phenotypes (p = 0.0421) and truncating variants predicted to escape NMD presented with more severe phenotypes (p < 0.0001). Within this group, variants in the prolin-rich region of the POGZ protein were associated with the most severe phenotypes (p = 0.0004). Our study suggests that gain-of-function or dominant negative effect through escaping NMD and the location of the variants in the prolin-rich domain of the protein may play an important role in the severity of manifestations of POGZ–associated neurodevelopmental disorders.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

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