IHH enhancer variant within neighboring NHEJ1 intron causes microphthalmia anophthalmia and coloboma

Author:

Wormser OhadORCID,Perez Yonatan,Dolgin VadimORCID,Kamali Bahman,Tangeman Jared A.ORCID,Gradstein Libe,Yogev YuvalORCID,Hadar NoamORCID,Freund Ofek,Drabkin MaxORCID,Halperin Daniel,Irron Inbar,Grajales-Esquivel ErikaORCID,Del Rio-Tsonis Katia,Birnbaum Ramon Y.,Akler GidonORCID,Birk Ohad S.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractGenomic sequences residing within introns of few genes have been shown to act as enhancers affecting expression of neighboring genes. We studied an autosomal recessive phenotypic continuum of microphthalmia, anophthalmia and ocular coloboma, with no apparent coding-region disease-causing mutation. Homozygosity mapping of several affected Jewish Iranian families, combined with whole genome sequence analysis, identified a 0.5 Mb disease-associated chromosome 2q35 locus (maximal LOD score 6.8) harboring an intronic founder variant in NHEJ1, not predicted to affect NHEJ1. The human NHEJ1 intronic variant lies within a known specifically limb-development enhancer of a neighboring gene, Indian hedgehog (Ihh), known to be involved in eye development in mice and chickens. Through mouse and chicken molecular development studies, we demonstrated that this variant is within an Ihh enhancer that drives gene expression in the developing eye and that the identified variant affects this eye-specific enhancer activity. We thus delineate an Ihh enhancer active in mammalian eye development whose variant causes human microphthalmia, anophthalmia and ocular coloboma. The findings highlight disease causation by an intronic variant affecting the expression of a neighboring gene, delineating molecular pathways of eye development.

Funder

Israel Science Foundation

The Morris Kahn Family Foundation; Israel Ministry of Science, Technology and Space and the National Knowledge Center for Rare/Orphan Diseases

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology

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