De novo variants in H3-3A and H3-3B are associated with neurodevelopmental delay, dysmorphic features, and structural brain abnormalities
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Published:2021-12
Issue:1
Volume:6
Page:
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ISSN:2056-7944
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Container-title:npj Genomic Medicine
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language:en
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Short-container-title:npj Genom. Med.
Author:
Okur Volkan, Chen Zefu, Vossaert Liesbeth, Peacock Sandra, Rosenfeld JillORCID, Zhao Lina, Du Haowei, Calamaro Emily, Gerard Amanda, Zhao Sen, Kelsay Jill, Lahr Ashley, Mighton Chloe, Porter Hillary M.ORCID, Siemon Amy, Silver Josh, Svihovec ShaynaORCID, Fong Chin-To, Grant Christina L.ORCID, Lerner-Ellis Jordan, Manickam Kandamurugu, Madan-Khetarpal Suneeta, McCandless Shawn E., Morel Chantal F., Schaefer G. Bradley, Berry-Kravis Elizabeth M., Gates Ryan, Gomez-Ospina Natalia, Qiu Guixing, Zhang Terry Jianguo, Wu Zhihong, Meng Linyan, Liu Pengfei, Scott Daryl A.ORCID, Lupski James R.ORCID, Eng Christine M., Wu NanORCID, Yuan BoORCID
Abstract
AbstractThe histone H3 variant H3.3, encoded by two genes H3-3A and H3-3B, can replace canonical isoforms H3.1 and H3.2. H3.3 is important in chromatin compaction, early embryonic development, and lineage commitment. The role of H3.3 in somatic cancers has been studied extensively, but its association with a congenital disorder has emerged just recently. Here we report eleven de novo missense variants and one de novo stop-loss variant in H3-3A (n = 6) and H3-3B (n = 6) from Baylor Genetics exome cohort (n = 11) and Matchmaker Exchange (n = 1), of which detailed phenotyping was conducted for 10 individuals (H3-3A = 4 and H3-3B = 6) that showed major phenotypes including global developmental delay, short stature, failure to thrive, dysmorphic facial features, structural brain abnormalities, hypotonia, and visual impairment. Three variant constructs (p.R129H, p.M121I, and p.I52N) showed significant decrease in protein expression, while one variant (p.R41C) accumulated at greater levels than wild-type control. One H3.3 variant construct (p.R129H) was found to have stronger interaction with the chaperone death domain-associated protein 6.
Funder
U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Human Genome Research Institute Gouvernement du Canada | Instituts de Recherche en Santé du Canada | CIHR Skin Research Training Centre National Natural Science Foundation of China Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences Natural Science Foundation of Beijing Municipality
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology
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