In-depth characterisation of a cohort of individuals with missense and loss-of-function variants disruptingFOXP2

Author:

Morison Lottie DORCID,Meffert Elisabeth,Stampfer Miriam,Steiner-Wilke Irene,Vollmer Brigitte,Schulze Katrin,Briggs Tracy,Braden Ruth,Vogel AdamORCID,Thompson-Lake Daisy,Patel Chirag,Blair Edward,Goel Himanshu,Turner Samantha,Moog Ute,Riess Angelika,Liegeois Frederique,Koolen David A,Amor David J,Kleefstra Tjitske,Fisher Simon EORCID,Zweier Christiane,Morgan Angela TORCID

Abstract

BackgroundHeterozygous disruptions ofFOXP2were the first identified molecular cause for severe speech disorder: childhood apraxia of speech (CAS), and yet few cases have been reported, limiting knowledge of the condition.MethodsHere we phenotyped 28 individuals from 17 families with pathogenicFOXP2-only variants (12 loss-of-function, five missense variants; 14 males; aged 2 to 62 years). Health and development (cognitive, motor, social domains) were examined, including speech and language outcomes with the first cross-linguistic analysis of English and German.ResultsSpeech disorders were prevalent (23/25, 92%) and CAS was most common (22/25, 88%), with similar speech presentations across English and German. Speech was still impaired in adulthood, and some speech sounds (eg, ‘th’, ‘r’, ‘ch’, ‘j’) were never acquired. Language impairments (21/25, 84%) ranged from mild to severe. Comorbidities included feeding difficulties in infancy (10/26, 38%), fine (13/26, 50%) and gross (13/26, 50%) motor impairment, anxiety (5/27, 19%), depression (6/27, 22%) and sleep disturbance (10/24, 42%). Physical features were common (22/27, 81%) but with no consistent pattern. Cognition ranged from average to mildly impaired and was incongruent with language ability; for example, seven participants with severe language disorder had average non-verbal cognition.ConclusionsAlthough we identify an increased prevalence of conditions like anxiety, depression and sleep disturbance, we confirm that the consequences ofFOXP2dysfunction remain relatively specific to speech disorder, as compared with other recently identified monogenic conditions associated with CAS. Thus, our findings reinforce thatFOXP2provides a valuable entry point for examining the neurobiological bases of speech disorder.

Funder

Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development

Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

National Health and Medical Research Council

Victorian Government’s Operational Infrastructure Support Program

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics

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